medics - Veterans of the Battle of the Bulge

Transcription

medics - Veterans of the Battle of the Bulge
TH E O FFIC IA L PUBLICATION
VOLUM E XXV
NUMBER I
•
VETERANS O F TH E BATTLE O F TH E BULGE, INC.
TH E ARDENNES CAMPAIGN
FEBRUARY 2006
WORLD WAR II
DIARY
Captain Dean F. Stillson
87th Infantry Division
345 Infantry Regiment
Battalion Surgeon
P a g e 25
MEDICS
in the Bulge
By R alph Storm
11th A rm ored Division
T h e w in te r o f 1 9 4 4 -4 5 was th e
c o ld e st, w e tte st w in te r p e r io d th a t
w estern E u ro p e h a d e x p e r ie n c e d m
3 0 y e a rs. ...M o re th an 4 5 ,0 0 0 so ld .e r s
w ere h o sp ita liz e d as c o ld in ju ry
c a s u a ltie s b etw e en N o vem b er, 1944
a n d A p r il 1945. __________ P a g e j l ^
WERE GOING TO LOUISVILLE -
d e ta ils n e x t issu e
V EltRANS OF THE
BATTl£ OF THE BULGE,
INC.
P O. Box 101418
ArlingiMi, VA 22210-4418
^03-528-4058
John McAuliffe
87th Infantry Division
Harry Meisel
565th AAA AW Battalion
Published
quarterly,
THE
BU LGE BUGLE is the official
publicatbn of the V eterans of
the Battle of the Bulge.
Ralph Bozarth
A sso ciate M e n b e r
Tw o Y ears:
Richard G. G uenther
511 Engineer Light Pontcn Co
P u b lish tjr/C h ie f E ditor:
G eorge C hekan
9th Infantry Division
C o n trib u tin g E d ito rs:
Robert F, Phillips
28th Infantry Division
H isto rical R e s e a rc h ;
John D. Bowen
A ssociate M ember
ELECTED O FFICERS:
P re s id e n t;
Stanley Wojtusik
106th Infantry Division
E x e c u tiv e V ice P re sid e n t:
William Greenville
86th Chemical Mortar Battalion
V ice P re sid e n t/M e m b e rsh ip :
Neil B. Thom pson
740th Tank Battalion
V ice P n is id e n t/C h a p te rs :
G eorge Fisher
26th Infantry Division
Vice President/M ifltary A ffairs:
R obert Phillips
29th Infantry Division
Vice P re sid e n t/P u b lic A ffairs:
Demitri "Dee" Paris
9th Armored Division
T re a su ro r;
William P. Taym an
37th Infantry Division
C o rre s p o n d in g S e c re ta ry :
Dorothy S. Davis
57th Field Hospital
R e c o rd in g S e c re ta ry :
John Bow/en
A ssociate M ember
«••••
A d m in istra tiv e D irector:
N ancy ^lOnson 703-528-4058
<• • • •
TR U STEES:
T h re e Y aars:
J o s e p h Zimmer
87lh Infantry Division
rHE
B
J l Xi l B U G L H
O n e Year:
F ra n ce s Dougherty
A sso c ia te M e n b e r
J a m e s W. Hunt
1st Infantry Division
HISTORICAL FOUNDATION:
P re s id e n t:
Alfred H M. S hehab
38 Cavalry
VBOB PA ST PRESIDEN""S:
Clyde D. Boden*
1981-84
R obert J. V anH outen 1984-86
G eorge C hekan
1986-88
2003-05
William T. Greenville 198J5-90
Darrell Kuhn*
1990-92
William R. Hemphill* 1992*93
William P. Taym an
1993-94
G rover C. Twiner*
1994-95
199*3-97
Stanley Wojtusik
G eorge C. Linthicum 199'^-99
Jo h n J. Dunleavy 1999-2001
Louis C unningham
2001-03
‘ D e c e a se d
CHAPTER PR ESID EN TS
•ALABAMAGEN. GEORGE S. PATTON, JR . (XI)
\M II5 T e m p Je .Jr.
205-73 >-0961
4617 S Lake R»cge Or
Sirm ingham , AL 35224
•ARIZONA*
ARIZONA (XXVII
Lester King
828 N 6 8th Ave
P h o e rix , AZ 85043
SOUTHERN ARIZONA (Llll)
G eo rg e W M cGue
7830 E Ham pton St
T u cso n , AZ 85715-4214
623-93H -1184
520-29^1-3220
•BELGIUM^
5TH FUSILIERS OF BELGIUM (XXXVIII
(P re sid e n t's n a n ^ n e ed e d )
*CA:.lFORNIA»
FFlESNO (V)
Arthur :5teffensen
7469 S C ed a r Ave
F resn o CA 9372f.-'.-*749
•IOWA*
559-266-2997
Gi:N. ClEORGE S . F'ATTON, JR . (Xlll)
D onald C. Stafford
408-662-0472
1C1 Viti Soderini
A ptos, DA 95003
GOLDE N G A T t (X)
W iliam C. Armstrong
925-937-4416
1 J1 0 E ncanto PI
W alnut C reek. CA &4597-2319
SOUTIiERN CALIFORNIA (XVI)
Jo h n W Mosley
562-947-1727
16428 l.ebo St
W iittiei CA 90603
S/iN DIEGO (LI)
R c b e n D. Schrell
2530 S an Jo aq u in Cl
S s n Oi«!go. CaW oni.J 92109
858-274-5738
•CONNECTICUT*
CONNE CTICUT YANKEE (XL)
Rioharc E gan
203-634-0974
79 A lccve St
M<;riden, CT 06451
•CCuORADO*
ROCKY MOUNTAIN (XXXIX)
A W ayne Field
719-598-2234
PO Bo> 7247
C clo raco Springs, CO 80933-7l’47
•D Ei^W A RE*
BFiANC YWINE V/AL..EY CHAPTER (LXVI)
C harles G affeney
302-762-3D23
907 Sh pley Rd
Wilminfiton, DE 15»fi03-4927
•Ft.ORIDA*
CE NTRAL FLORIC»A (XVIII)
(P esid«jnt's N aine n'^eded)
FLORIDA CITRUS (KXXII)
G erald
Myer>.
320 E F’alm Dr
L a k e la rd , FL 3 3 8 0 :-2 6 5 0
GOLDEN TRIANGLI (XLVIII)
Harry E Kirby
11569 55W71 Cir
O cala, FL 34476-5M82
863-686-2121
561-585-7086
352-873-8380
FLORIDA SOUTHW^-ST CHAPTER (LXVII)
V incent Runowich
727-323-3793
40 3 3 Kith A veN
St. P etersb u rg , FL 33713
•ir.DIANA*
NORTHERN INDIANA (XXX)
W itliam T Tuley
7231 C leveland Cii
Merrillville. IN 464K /-3774
CENTRAL INDIANA (XLVII)
L o 'e n H, Hewitt
4 35 N Tim ber T'ail
G reenw ood, IN 46142
HAWKEYE. STATE (XLIV)
Harald F? I. ndstrom
4105 75th ill
Des M oines. lA 50322-2551
219-756-7201
317-888-8232
712-368-2335
515-278-0081
•MARYLAND-DC^
MARYLAND/D.C. (Ill)
E a r e O E im o n d s
410-647-5215
PO 0 0 x 7 9
Arnold, MD 21012
•MASSACHUSETTSLAMAR S<3UTTER/CENTRAL
M ASSACHUSETTS (XXII)
J o h n E. Mc-\utiffe
508-754-7183
425 P le a s m t St
W oicester. I«4A 01609
CAPE COO & THE ISLANDS (LVIII)
A lexander hV. M ac lsaa c
508-362*6876
21 F reem ar Rd
Y annoulh Port, MA 02575
•MICHIGAN^
W EST MICHIGAN (XXIII)
M aurice Coie
PO Box 81
Fife Lake, ^^l 49633
231-879-4040
GREAT LAKES (XXI)
C h ap ter new defunct
•MISSISSIPPI*
MISSISSIPF’I (XXXril)
M arning C coper
78 Fern V illey Rd
B randon, M3 39042
•M ISSOURI
GA~EWA> (XXV)
W. Kent S te p h e n s
107 Bluffvisw Lane
Collinsvtlle IL 62234
INDIAN RIVER FL>^IO A (XLI)
L e ste r 0 . Bell
321-952-9S91
2150 Ailantfc St #414
Ibou Tie B each. F l 32951
SCiUTHEAST FLORIDA (LXII)
G eo rg e F isher
3456 S O cean E!lv(l #503
Palm B uach, FL 33480
IOWA (XX:(IV)
Piu5i P Retji
103 D a v erp o rt St
hol!>tein. lA 51025
601-825-4479
618-344-1616
•NEW JERSEY*
PETBR F. LESLIE. JR . (LIV)
Alvin S u s s'lia n
201-224-5086
900 P alisa j e Ave
Fori Lee. MJ 07024
FORT MOfJMOUTH (LVI)
Edw ard Tur-ell
3 Ct^estnut Dr
H azlet, NJ D7730
732-2S4-5447
FORT DIX/MCGUIRE AFB (LX)
Lloyd Ofth
656-235-0504
10 Locust Ct
M otnt L a u u l. NJ 08054
SOUTH JER SEY (LXI)
G us Epple (VP)
609-453-9690
43 R oute 47 S
C ap e May Court H ouse. NJ 08210
•NEW YORK*
CENTRAL NEW YORK (II)
D onald F Dixon
215-658-7771
269 N o n h la id Dr
C entral Sq-jare, NY 13036-9756
MOHAWK ^(ALLEY (XXVIII)
K enneth H R ow land
10 P ulaski !it
New Yorit f/ills. NY 13417
HUDSON N'ALLEY (tL)
D ouglas J Vink
23 S an d h u rst Dr
S linijeriancj. NY 12159-9420
315-736-5836
£18-4.32-5050
STATEN ISLAND (LN)
William Abell
297 Clarice Ave
S taten Island, NY 10306
G EN ESSEE VALLEY (LVIl)
T hom as W Hope
58 C arverdale Dr
R ochester, NY 14618
MID-HUDSON VALLEY (LIX)
D uncan T ru etian
29 Overtiill Ln
Wanwick NY 10990-3317
LONG ISLAND (LXIII)
David Saltm an
PO Box 7127
W antagh. NY 11793
917-299-9766
585-473-1629
914-986-6376
516-221-5096
•NORTH CAROLINA*
NORTH CAROLINA (IX)
William R. St ickland
910-897-8295
R D #3, Box #514
Dunn, NC 2H334
LEFiIGH VALLEY (LV)
Morris D Metz
125 R ichard G arr Rd
E a sto n . PA 18040-6916
RBVDING (LXIV)
S am uel 6 S c a le s
3419 F o s te r Ln
R eading, PA 19605
610-921-2568
CUMBERLAND VALLEY (LXV)
Jo h T W . F a g u e
7 1 7 -5 3 0 -« 8 l7
306 Lurgan Ave
S h ippensburg. PA 17257
•RHODE ISLAND*
RHODE ISLAND (XXIV)
M anuel Riberio
40 <-253-7369
50 <3reylock Rd
Bristol. Rl 02809-1631
•SOUTH CAROUNA*
SOUTH CAROUNA (VII)
Melvin G. B radenburg
80:v-€04-8774
P O Box 2010
L eesv tIle,S C 29070
•NORTH DAKOTANORTH DAKOTA (XX)
H aiiy Sw endiion (S ecretary)
701-567-2308
PO Box 55
H ettinger SC 58639
•TEXAS*
G R i^ T E R HOUSTON (XXVII)
(C h.ipter no longer functioning)
•OHIO*
BLANCHARD VALLEY (XLII)
Matvin A. R u jse l
1326 Q ueeen sw o o d Dr #4
Findlay, OH 45840-6952
BEM FREEMAN (XXXVII)
Ned W Smith
11339 C ounty R oad 2326
Tyler. TX 75707-9541
BUCKEYE (XXIX)
Milan A. Rolit;
1278 C ulpepper Dr
Akron, OH 4*313-6840
419-423-8530
330-867-2061
GEN. D. D. EISENHOWER (XXXV)
R ichard M. S h a p e
211 O a k crestC t
R u ssells Point. OH 43348-9508
NORTH COAST OHIO (XXXVI)
Edwin J .S to c h
216-731-1258
27101 EdgecliffO r
Euclid. Oh 44132
CENTRAL OHIO (LXVII)
Alton L. L itsenberger
320 S arato g a St
D elaw are. OH 43015
740-363-0613
•PENNS YLVANIA^
DELAWARE VALLEY (IV)
S tanley W ojtusik
215-637-4191
9639 W issincm ing St
Philadelphia. PA 19114
SUSQUEHANNA (XIX)
(To t>e appointed)
W ESTERN PENNSYLVANIA (XIV)
H arvey B. W augam an
724-834 4474
9 M eadow brook Ave
G reenburg, PA 15601-1711
OHIO VALLEY (XXXI)
Felix J. Cistolo
111 Franklin Ave
E'Iwood City, PA 16117-2214
61«>-252-3694
ALA MO (XLVI)
Jo h n Hamilton
960i} Tioga Drive
S a n Antonio. TX 78269-1904
LOME STAR (L)
T ed Y oung
1320 R ivercreslD r
M esquite, TX 75181-1079
21l-6»5-19C 4
9 7 r-2 ?2 -9 3 7 5
VERMONT-NEW HAMPSHIRE-t4AlNE*
TRI STATE (XVII)
Alpha A C hevrette
60?-48S-9448
16 Eiirch Hill Dr
H ooksett,N H 03106-1523
■VIRGINIA^
NOFtTHERN VIRGINIA (XV)
R obert J . Vanhiouten
3741) Chain Bridge Rd
F a ira x . VA 22030-3212
CRATER (XLIII)
W. Elaxter Perttinson
9441 W. River Rd
M atoaca. VA 23803-1019
■^03-27 5-4168
R 04-59D-I185
•WASHINGTON*
NOflTHW EST (VI)
Phil R obbins
360-674-7175
P O l3ox 993
Port O rchard, WA 98366
•WISCONSIN^
NORTHERN WISCONSIN (I)
ElrTV‘r M D ellenbach
920:! Highland
W au sau . Wl 54401
715-84 *>-3951
724-758 3163
SOUTHCENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA (XLV)
G eorge F, S c h n e id e r
717-464-9442
237 Willow Valley Of
L a n c a ste r. PA 17602-4782
CONTACT THE CHAPTER IN YO'JR AREA.
YOU WILL BE GLAD YOU DID.
IF YOU FIND YOU HAVE A U T H .E TIMF.,
WRITE TO VBOB AND W E'LL SENC- YOU THE
NECESSARY TOOLS TO GET OFF TO A
GOOD START IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF A
CHAPTER IN YOUR AREA.
FcbruiiP' 2006
President's Message
With pleasure and sincere gratitude for your confidence in
selecting me as your president once again, I accept, with renewed
energy and enthusiasm, the responsibilities necessary to fulfill
our mission, strengthen our force and regenerate the lively
interest we’ve experienced over the years. I’m no stranger to
hard work, sleepless nights and "pie in the sky" dreams. 1 really
enjoy "army life," military history and "making a mark" to
showcase what we accomplished together 61 years ago, while
appreciating the friendship and loyalty of many comrades,
forever remembering our "buddies" who didn’t make it home.
1 feel rewarded for the effort already put forth.
My predecessor, George Chekan,
has earned "his space to relax,"
along with his committee, John
Dunleavy and John Bowen, after
the successful September reunion
in Pittsburgh. The Chekan Family
participation was a highlight
amongst many other pleasant
memories. Organizing an event
like this is not an easy task and
having family from the area pitch
in was certainly a plus and another
center of attention during his _
presidency. George, you, and your
Stanley Wojtusik
family deserve our thanks.
I’m very much aware of the great responsibility, long hours
and self-sacrifice and we have a lot of work to do together.
Frankly, I’ve been thinking a lot about the word "opportunity."
This is just not an opportunity for me but an opportunity for all
of us to reshape this organization and make it more responsive
to the vision we must develop during our remaining years and
for future generations. Oh, no...l am not your president to
encourage "retirement," but rather a "beginning."
I’m not saying I plan to throw out everything that came before
me since previous leadership has made it unnecessary to
"reinvent" the organization, but they have given us plenty to
build on, and plenty of opportunities to strike out in new
directions. Let me outline what I see as important. We will
have to address—aggressively and successfully—such problem
areas as: accountability-both financially and administratively,
membership incentives, visibility of your officers at chapter
meetings, member participation, better communication and
actively pursue Congressional approval to become an officially
chartered organization. The fallout from the 2004 trip to Europe
which has jolted our trust and lends to great embarrassment to
our organization is being vigorously pursued by Past President
John Dunleavy and our very capable Treasurer Bill Tayman.
On a more exciting note is anticipating the installation of our
majestic memorial in Arlington Cemetery hopefully on May 8,
2006. Another "investment in history".... [Monument to be
inscribed as follows.]
A T R IB U T E TO WORLD WAR II
A M E R IC A N S O L D IE R S WHO F O U G H T TH E
G REA T E S T L A N D BA T T L E IN TH E H IST O R Y
O F TH E U NITED S T A T E S A R M Y I N TH E A R D E N N E S D E C E M B E R 16, 1944 TO J A N U A R Y 25, 1945,
IN A P F R E C IA TIO N B Y T H E GRA TEFUL
THE BULGE BUGLE
P EO P LE O F TH E KIN G D O M O F B E LG IU M
A N D TH E G RAND D U C H Y O F LU XE M B O U R G
1 know what a great organization 1 have to work with and 1
look forward to the challenges because we will be facing them
together. □
VBOB has a new address;
PO Box 101418
Arlington, VA 22210-4418
The old address still appears on many things.
•ATTENTION— ATTENTIONHOW TO REPLACE LOST MILITARY
MEDALS/RECORDS
To obtain lost decorations or awards from WWII, write:
Commander (ARPERCEN)
9700 Page Blvd
St. Louis, Missouri 63132-5260
explain how you lost the medals, request replacement and send
copies of discharge certificates to show you are entitled to them.
To obtain a copy of missing discharge records (Form 214)
write:
Commander (ARPERCEN)
ATT: DARP-PAS-EVS
9700 Page Blvd
St. Louis, MO 63132-5260
If you have been awarded the Combat Infantry Badge (CIB)
(WWII only), you are entitled to a Bronze Star Medal. If you
have not received this award write:
Commander (ARPERCEN)
ATT: DARP-PAS-EAW
9700 Page Blvd.
St. Louis, MO 63132-5260
Make the request and include a copy of your discharge
certificate. This document should show you received the CIB.
[You will need to exercise patience. It will take time.
Don’t forget to send copy of your discharge.]
IN THIS ISSUE
3. President’s Message
4. L etters to the Editor
5. Reunions
6. Members Speak O ut
7. 2'"‘ Arm ored
8. Night A ttack Patrol
9. Genesse C hapter
10. Swamped by Germ ans
n . Malmedy M assacre
12. Medic Experience
13. As I Rember
15. 61” A nniversary
16. Please Remember Me
17. Lone Star C hapter
18. Medics in Bulge
20. Bee Stings
21. Trucks
22. 526 Armored
23. Camille Kohn
24. Tiger Tank
25. W W II Diary
29. Reflections
30. Bulge Certificate
31. VBOB Q uarterm aster
February 2006
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
REG A RD ING THE PROXIMITY FU SE
I rea d with in te rest J a m e s R. Bird’s excellent letter in the
N o v em ber issu e, in which he m entioned th at th e proximity
fu se w a s first u se d in D ec em b e r 1944.
His d o cu m en tatio n a p p e a rs to be im peccable, but from
th e e n c lo se d [below] p a g e s from th e book "146 E ngineer
C o m b at B attalion-E S S A Y O N S ," I believe that I saw th e
proximity fu se in u s e in Sim m erath, G erm any, ab o u t 10
N o v em ber by a new style tank d e stro y e r with a 90 mm
gun. If any I D s h av e know ledge in my beliefs, I would be
fo rev er grateful if you would write your co m m en ts to The
Bugle.
"It was at Simmerath where I first saw the "proximity fuse"
in use by one o f our new style tank destroyers. The
chassis appeared to be similar to one of our new tanks, as
the bogie wheels were evenly spaced and ere larger than
those on the M-4 Shermans. They were distinctly different
from any TDs that I had seen previously, and they mounted
a 90m m gun I marveled at the consistent height of their
air bursts.
"When I asked the gunner how he could se t his fuses so
accurately to get such uniform air-bursts, he replied that a
m agnet in the shell’s nose caused it to explode
automatically at the desired height, when it neared the
ground. I said that it couldn’t possibly be a m agnet-it
would have to be som e kind o f a radio signal. But a radio
transmitter and receiver within an artillery shell—impossible!
I nad no ready answer, and learned only iattii ihai m y iniiiai
notion had been correct.
"Through our binoculars, we observed German amhiilances making multiple daylight runs to the pill-boxes at the
base of the slope. It looked suspicious, and we thought
that they might be bringing in ammunition, food, or other
supplies in the ambulances: even though this would have
been a violation of the Geneva Convention—and German
regular army units were usually quite scrupulous in abiding
by its dictates.
"The proximity fust) m ay well have been the reason for all
the ambulance runs that we obsen/ed. The British had
developed the proximity fuse in 1940 but it was not yet in
com m on use by any army. I had not seen it, nor had I
even heard o f it before then Chapter 4 o f "War as I Knew
It," by General George S. Patton, stated "the night of
D ecem ber 25 and 26, we had used the new proximity fuse
on d iiumbtii o f G eim dns neat Echteinach at)d actually
killed 700 o f th e m ." (We had seen the proximity fuse used
with devatating effect six w eeks earlier; even though
several WWII books have stated that the proximity fuse
was first used during the Bulge. These authors were in
error by no less than five weeks!)
W ES ROSS
146 EN G R CMBT BN B
B O S E COIVIIVIENTARY & BIRD’S A N SW ER
W hile I w a s but a m e ch a n ic in a 40m m antiaircraft outfit.
I do own an aftr action report of th e Third Army.
S o m e w h e re buried in this large heavy book I read th at the
proximity fu zed am m unition w a s first u sed , shooting V1
a n d V2 ro c k e ts com ing in o v er th e English C hannel in th e
B attle of Britain. T hey would h av e b e e n fired by 90m m
T i ll' liU L G E RU GLr:
antiaircraft g u n s an d d u d s w ent into th e channel. I believe
th e section said they w ere 80% su c ce ssfu l an d w ere
resp o n sib le for victory o v er th at battle.
I also read th e AAA 90m m outfit carried am m unition with
proximity fu ze s during th e Battle of th e Bulge from w h en ce
co m e s P a tto n ’s adm iration for them .
O ur outfit, th e 565th AAA AW Battalion p ro tected 3rd
Army H ea d q u arters in Luxem bourg City so n ev er got close
to w here th e action w as, ex c ep t th e fact railroad ca n n o n s
would zero in on u s every night firing from Trier, G erm any,
ab o u t 20+ m iles e a s e of us. Early in th e Bulge, our gun
batteries did h av e a bit of ta rg e t practice w hen a stray meg
w as lost. This w a s our very first assig n m en t. W e w ere
attac h ed to 3rd Army H ead q u arters. Did s e e th e "old man"
G eneral P atton once. He w as out walking his dog, "Willie,"
and I alm o st ran over th e dog-1 s u p p o s e I’d still b e in
L eavenw orth if I had.
CHET KRAUSE
565 AAA AW BN
YOU NEED SOM E MUSCLE
In early O ctober, 1944, out outfit s e t up sh o p facilities at
th e railroad station in F ran co rch am p s, Belgium. W e w ere
a heavy m ain te n an c e co m pany (tank) and our job w as to
repair an d rep lace ta n k s an d tank d e stro y e rs a s it b e c a m e
n e c e ssa ry .
T he eq u ip m en t th at w as being turned in
show ed w ea r and te a r big time. T he old eq u ip m en t w as on
th e tough sid e and obsolete. rMtnougn tn e oio Bquipm eni
w as ob so lete, th at being th e 75m m gun, th e new 76m m
n u n w a s n n lv a s t e p a h p a r i
It still riirin 't m a t n h u p w ith t h p
88m m gun. H owever, 1 did a s k o n e of th e tank m en how
they faced th e G erm an ta n k s and his an sw e r w as, "We
g ang up on them ." T h at w a s not a good a n s w e r but an
h o n e st one. You do th e b e st th at you can but why could
w e h av e not d o n e b etter?
Jo h n J Dunleavy, of th e 737th T ank Battalion, m a d e his
point in th A ugust 200 5 issu e w hen h e e x p re s s e a nis
opinion of our little S h erm an . You n ee d th e m u scle w hen
facing a m o n ster of a tank and th e 88m m gun.
L ater on, th e T-26 w a s m ore of a m atch for th e G erm an
tanks, with our 90m m gun, but, by th at time, th e w ar w as
ju st ab o u t over. A little too late.
EDWARD ECHMALIAN
557 ORD HVY MAINT CO (TK)
P S. T he railroad station is no longer th ere. A so c co r field
h a s tak en its place.
CEREM ONY AT ST. VITH
My friend, H ans J. Wijers, of Holland, o rg an ized a formal
w reath-laying cerem o n y to y h av e tak en p lace on Friday th e
16th of D ec em b e r to co m m em o ra te th e sta rt of th e Bulge
on th e 16th of D ecem ber, 1944, and re q u e ste d sev eral
units involved th e re to furnish w re ath s for it. I s e n t him the
m oney for o n e "In m em ory of th e 7 m em b rs of my squad,
my A C om pany, th e 38th Infantry Battalion an d m e m b ers
of th e 7th A rm ored Division w ho failed to survive th e battle
of St Vith, 17-23 D ec em b e r 1944, along with my picture
in full uniform in asm u ch a s I co u ld n ’t b e th e re in spirit
Mans w a s ao ie to g e t tn e coior g u ara rrom tn e ^bth intantry
Febriiarv 20Uh
to help in the cerem ony that w as also attended by several
units involved in the b attle -th e 106th Infantry, 26th Infantry
and a couple of others.
GLENN R. FACKLER, SR.
38 INF BN A
RED LETTER DAY
This is a Red Letter Day for m e -fo r once my dues are on
time.
You and the staff should be com m ended for the
information and data in The Bulge. I am also a m em ber of
the VFW, American Legion and the DAV but your
publication h as a greater source of information.
I p ass The Bugle on to a doctor at the Brockton Hospital
v\/here I volunteer one day a week. His father w as a
captain in the medical corps and served at St. Vith,
Belgium.
I’ll close for now and drink the toast to us all at the date
and time cited in the newsletter.
FRANK C. PAGLIUCA
75 INFD
BROTHERS-IN-ARMS
[This letter ws se n t to the "Legionnaire M agazine" last
year, but was never published, after the publication o f
"Brothers in Arm s" by the basketball player Kareem Abdul
Jabbar]
To understand the contribution of any World W ar II unit
in Europe, one m ust consider its size as well a s its
mission. The 761st Tank Battalion, about which the book
Brothers in A rm s w as recently published to much acclaim,
consisted of about 1,000 black soldiers plus 30-40 light and
medium tanks.
It w as dwarfed by at least 10 arm ored divisions that were
about 20 tim es it size and, b ecau se of their attached units
like anti-tank and anti-aircraft, w ere vastly more capable of
executing consequential assignm ents.
Moreover, the 761st Tank Battalion arrived in Europe in
November, 1944, while many of the other major units had
arrived before or shortly after D-Day in June. So these
leviathans not only p o sse sse d immeasurably more fire­
power, but had much more com bat experience than this
small battalion.
It is in such a perspective that the latest book Brothers in
A rm s picturing the heroism of the 761st Tank Battalion,
m ust be viewed. In late November, 1944, the 761st w as
attached to my infantry division, consisting of about 15 to
20 battalions of infantry, artillery, tank destroyers, anti­
aircraft ordnance and other units. So, in total numbers, we
had at least 15 tim es a s much m anpower and m easurably
more firepower.
To this day, 87th Division infantrymen affirm under oath
that the 761st’s tankers fell back during several extrem e
crises, such a s the action to drive the G erm ans out of the
Village of Tillet, Belgium.
As personal and heroic a s the book by Kareem Abdul
Jab b ar pictures this one small battalion, its claims and
major contributions cannot be accurate, and becau se they
reflect on much larger and more decorated units that
THE BULGE BUGLE
suffered vastly higher casualties, cannot be accepted.
As an index of Brothers in Arms' accuracy, consider the
battalion’s reports of enem y units or w eapons destroyed or
disabled. Any w ar's insistent dem ands m ake it impossible
to determ ine w hether an infantry or an arm ored division or
this small battalion’s artillery, mortar or tank fire destroyed
an enem y vehicle. As in any way, with many units firing
simultaneously or successively, no effort could be spared,
or in actuality w as never spared, to determ ine w hose
bullets or artillery destroyed which tank or enem y artillery.
Nor is it true, a s the dover of Brothers in A rm s claims,
that while infantrymen received furloughs from frontline
duty, this small group of black tankers rem ained fighting
throughout the war. Millions of infantry riflemen, machinegunners, mortar gunners, jeep drivers, cooks, clerks and
artillerymen remained fighting, b ec au se in World W ar II in
Europe, there w ere only two w ays to be evacuated from
the frontlines. O ne w as to be seriously disabled, and the
other w as in a casket.
MITCHELL KAIDY
87 INFD 345 INF D
REUNIONS
I I T H A R M O R E D D IV IS IO N , A u g u st 13-20, 2006, K in g o f P ru ssia,
P e n n sy lv an ia. C o n ta ct: 1 1th A R M D , 2 3 2 8 A d m ira l S treet, A liq u lp p a ,
P e n n s y lv a n ia 15001. T e le p h o n e : 7 2 4 -3 7 5 -7 2 9 5 .
7 8 T H IN F A N T R Y D IV IS IO N , A u g u st 16-19. 2006, P ittsb u rg h ,
P e n n sy lv an ia. C o n ta ct: H e rm a n (R e d ) G o n z ale s, 104 O ak G le n R oad.
P ittsb u rg h . P e n n s y lv a n ia 15237.
8 0 T H IN F A N T R Y D IV IS IO N . S e p te m b e r 20 -2 3 , 200 6 , C o lu m b u s,
G e o rg ia . C o n ta ct: R o b ert H. B u rro w s, B ox 45 3 , B ro o m field , C o lo ra d o
80038.
T e le p h o n e :
3 0 3 -4 3 9 -2 1 9 8 .
8 6 T H C H E M I C A L M O R T A R B A T T A L IO N , M ay 7-13. 2006.
C h atta n o o g a . T e n n e sse e . C o n ta ct: G e o rg e L. M o b ra y . 818 W est 6 2nd
S treet. A n n isto n . A riz o n a 36206. T e le p h o n e : 2 5 6 -8 2 0 -4 4 1 5 .
8 7 T H IN F A N T R Y D IV IS IO N , Ju n e 8-10, 200 6 , P o rtlan d . M aine.
C o n ta ct: S am T h o m p so n . T e le p h o n e : 5 0 8 -2 8 5 -4 6 5 6 .
2 9 6 T H E N G IN E E R C O M B A T B A T T A L IO N , O c to b e r 11-13, 2006.
C o n ta ct:
R o b ert T. W illia m s, 123 R o b eth L ane, W e th e rsfie ld .
C o n n e c tic u t 06109.
3 2 8 T H IN F A N T R Y C O M B A T T E A M , O c to b e r 17-19. 200 6 . A tla n tic
C ity, N e w Jerse y .
C o n ta ct: A le x P a g n o tta , 6 0 9 B ra n d o n D riv e ,
Je ffe rso n v ille , P e n n s y lv a n ia 19403. T e le p h o n e : 6 1 0 -5 3 9 -3 3 3 7 .
5 0 1 S T P A R A C H U T E IN F A N T R Y R E G IM E N T , June 13-18. 200 6 ,
Fort M itc h e ll, K e n tu ck y . C o n ta ct: V a le ria A m b u rg e y . T e le p h o n e : 859781-4 1 2 6 .
7 7 I S T F IE L D A R T IL L E R Y B A T T A L IO N , M ay 18-20. 200 6 ,
C an to n . O h io . C o n ta ct: C h ris C h ris to ffe rs o n . 4 0 2 0 3 6 th A v e n u e C o u rt.
M o lin e , Illin o is 6 1 2 6 5 . T e le p h o n e : 3 0 9 -7 6 2 -3 8 8 1 .
• • • • • •
The older an ex-soldier gets, the better a soldier he was.
Februar> 2006
MEMBERS SPEAK OUT
N O
S
W
E
A
T
. , . More ’n More
Associate M em ber R ichard F. Jones is trying to find
information regarding PFC ERN EST L. BARNES, 99TH
INFANTRY DIVISION, 194TH INFANTRY RE G IM E N T ,
CO M PA NY K, who was tcilled in action in Belgium, December
19, 1944. Cause o f death according to "Report of Burial," was
Pen-W Neck, K 721-34B and his family would like to know what
that means. Any information you can provide will be very much
appreciated. Write to Richard at: PO Box 80464, Canton, Ohio
44708-0464.
Associate M em ber A ntoine Nouens recently found two dog
tags. They belonged to G LEN N W. BUHRM AN, 78TH
INFANTRY D IV ISIO N, 310TH INFANTRY R E G IM E N T ,
CO M PA NY K, (from Delaware) and A NTHONY P. ALUSKA,
75TH INFA NTRY D IV ISIO N, (from Port Riclimoud, New
York).
(Found another request from Antoine—RALPH
S H A PIR O , probably 1ST ARM Y (Pittsburgh), and ARTHUR
.1. S M IT H , 75TH
INFANTRY
DIVISION, 289TH
INFANTRY R E G IM E N T , (East Providence, Rhode Island). If
you can provide information on any o f these men or their
families, please write to Antoine at; Aawal 41; 5211 PS; Den
Bosch; Holland,
" L e t's b lam e it on G eorge/ h e 's not here to d a y !'
R O B ER T D. SC H R E L L , 509TH M ILITA RY P O L IC E
B A TTA LIO N , writes to express his gratitude to the people of
Cincy, Belgium, which helped his battalion ii; so muiiy waya.
Robert says they had enough TNT planted around Ciney to blow
it off the map. If you remember the 509th please write to
Robert at: 2530 San Joaquin Court, San Diego, California
92109.
A ssociate M em ber M arv a S. F arm sw o rth would like to know
if someone could provide her with information or tell her where
to find out about the activities o f the 526TH A RM O RED
INFA NTRY BA TTA LIO N . Her husbami, HUGH JA M E S
F A R N SW O R TH , served in this unit. Can you help? Write to
her at: 776 South 105th West, Centerville, Utah 84014-2173.
BOB PIN E R ,
1ST
INFANTRY
DIVISION, 26TH
INFANTRY R E G IM E N T , CO M PA N Y B, is seeking
information regarding the following nurses stationed at the
J17'I'H STA TIO N H O SPIT A L , in Belgium, December, 1944:
L IE U T E N A N T
JE R R Y
M cEV O Y ,
L IE U T E N A N T
E L IZ A B E T H T IC E N D O R F and LIEU TEN AN T BERTHA
E IC H H O R N . If you know anything about these ladies, write to
Bob at: 2412 St. Andrews Blvd #6, Panama City, Florida
32405.
A rtist
H ow ard Brodie ‘45
N um bing Cold
and winter took out G.I. 's
not reached bv German puns.
TH E BU LG E BU GLE
Josh Horth writes that he is writing a book about WWII and
would like to interview some o f the BoB veterans. If you can
help him write to him at: 2018 North Jay, Aberdeen, South
Dakota 57401.
Can anyone provide CLY D E J. H U N ZEK ER , 87TH
INFANTRY D IV ISIO N, with a map showing where his division
fought? Write to him at: 357 North 32nd Road, Syracuse.
Nebraska 68446-7812.
F'chniarv 2006
2ND ARMORED TROOPS
ARE "AMERICANS AT THEIR
THEIR MOST MAGNIFICENT”
[The following article appeared in the January issue o f the
2nd Armored newsletter "Hell on Wheels Bulletin. The
article was written by Stanley Baron, o f the London News
Chronicle, in his story on the Battle o f Samree, Belgium,
which he described as "The Greatest Action Since First
Army Attacked. The article was sent in by Irving Miller o f
the 41st Armored Infantry Regiment.]
Eastern Belgium, Wednesday, Jan. 10 (Delayed) - This is the
story o f the battle of Samree, the story of just another name on
the Ardennes battle map which the Germans tried to make
another St. Lo.
But now, after 48 hours o f most bitter, murderous fighting
which has gone on night and day through snowstorms and
temperatures which made the very rivers freeze, they are fleeing
to the south.
And the weary dirty bearded G.I. Joes half dead on their feet
for want o f 12 hours’ sleep in a week, half frozen for lack o f a
single hot meal since Wednesday last are stumbling triumphantly
after them.
It was ten o ’clock this morning when the town on the ridge
northeast o f Laroche fell to a dash of tanks and men who picked
up their leaden feet to run in the wake of them. But the story
goes back to a wooded gorge six miles northward.
These were ten Tiger tanks in those woods. The snow had
drifted over them so that they were completely camouflaged.
The fog seeped down into the gorge and at intervals the sound
o f the advancing American tank tracks would come to the
Germans.
There was room for only one at a time. The Germans had only
to sit still and wait. Then, through the fog at 50 yards range the
shape of an American tank would loom, there would be a sudden
violent burst o f fire and the sound of the tracks would stop.
We lost some tanks. The tank crews who survived stumbled
out, not to back from the battle but to renew it. The engineers
went forward and in the face o f point-blank fire pulled the tanks
off the road making way for the next. Mobile gun teams stayed
by their guns all Monday night pouring fire into the woods
seeking the invisible targets.
By Tuesday morning snow was driving through the pitch dark,
covering the tank periscopes, but suddenly under these conditions
the Americans again thrust forward.
It was a quick sharp stab made possible by men who had gone
quietly out under cover o f darkness strewing the road with
cinders and sand to give the steel tank tracks a chance to grip,
and it succeeded. With a rush the tanks went through.
There is a dip between the point at which the advance had now
arrived and the town o f Samree. On the east dug-in tanks were
commanding it and others were firing down from the town
against the engineers who worked through the snow to destroy
the road blocks the Germans had made by felling the wayside
trees.
Once again the decision was taken to attack before dawn.
Once again the artillery was firing all through the right against
Samree. As the fog cleared and the stars came out a red glow
THE BULGE BUGLE
hung over the town lighting the snow on the slopes a strange
Alpine rose. It originated from the pin-points o f seven burning
tanks.
At seven o’clock came the order to attack. One tank column
went to the left, another to the right. They moved close in to the
right to take advantage o f the paths the engineers had again
prepared. After them the infantry ran and then, as the tanks
diverged to the heights south-east and south-west o f the town the
doughboys went straight in.
To the last it was a perfectly coordinated action. As the
infantrymen cleared the town from house to house the tanks
above poured fire ahead o f them.
Before they entered, smoke shells had blanketed the enemy
tanks and guns. Their crews are remnants o f a division we
believe completely decimated. The cooks, the bottle-washes of
the division’s headquarters company have all been thrown in.
They came toward the G .l.’s today with their hands over their
heads, broken, utterly defeated men.
Tonight, the Second Armored Division still goes forward.
Since the breakthrough they have taken 1,700 prisoners, killed
3,500 Germans, smashed or captured 110 tanks. They carry with
then a special congratulation from Field Marshal Montgomery.
They are Americans at their most m agnificent.□
WITS OF WAR
AWO
"ru e
eX G M PT \F MDu 'RE O V E R ( o5
IS iXT
"
Sign in Third Army area (Patton’s)
YOU ARE NOW IN THE THIRD ARMY AREA
No helmet......................................................20 dollars
No shave............................................... : • 30 dollars
Buttons unshined......................................... 40 dollars
Windshield u p ............................................. 50 dollars
Pants down ..................................................60 dollars
(Bill Mauldin is said to have added a few to the original list)
— The GIs: Americans in Britain
February 2006
NIGHT A l I ACK PATROL
MEMORIALS
[The following article was taken from the December 2001
newsletter o f the 87th Infantry Division (The Golden
Acorn). The author's name has disappeared]
TO AMERICANS
IN LUXEMBOURG
Somewhere in the Bulge our platoon was ordered on a night
patrol. Its purpose was to infiltrate the enemy, have a fire fight
if necessary and take prisoners for intelligence purposes.
It was a dark moonless night which was ideal for night patrols.
The platoon was headed by a second lieutenant. We readied our
weapons and took care that our equipment didn’t rattle while
going towards the German lines. Actually we were to find out
exactly where they were. This was the first platoon o f A
Company, 347th Infantry Regiment.
As we proceeded in a double file we were heading in an
easterly direction but 1 noticed that we were slowly turning in a
more northerly direction.
As we continued to veer off in what I felt was the wrong
direction I became more and more convinced that we were off
our mark. We were going north not east! I his patrol started
about 1 or 2 a.m. and we moved slowly and as quietly as
possible. We were in an endless pitch black barrel with no
recognizable land marks.
After a bit 1 edged my way up to the platoon leader and
indicated to him that 1 thought we were moving in the wrong
direction. I received a curt and unpleasant answer. "I have the
com pass and 1 know which way w e’re traveling."
I returned to my position and thought, "You’re so damn smart
it’s OK with me that we are not going in the direction of the
enemy. I’ll live another d a y ." H a v i n g been on other night
patrols I had some idea about the drill. We usually coiitactcd the
enemy witliin some yards between them and us and then the
place would erupt in small arms fire with tracers from us and
them giving a fireworks display in the night-1 did not like to see
these tracers. There usually was a lot of ammo expended but
few if any casualties on our side. W e’d break off and return—at
least we knew where they were even though 1 don't think many
o f any rounds hit their mark.
Our march in the dark continued. Lo and behold the next
thing we heard was a strident "Halt" in English with its request
for the password. Luckily the correct password was given and
we were adm itted back into our lines.
Here we hart been iin al! night with the only perceived result
was that we had successfully made contact with some unit of
another battalion that luckily hadn’t opened up on us in the dark.
After some tim e of receiving directions from the friendly unit’s
men and officers we were shown the way back behind the lines
to our unit.
I'his had been a night in which we hadn’t fired a single round,
marched for hours, scared the hell out o f a sentry of another
American unit and almost got shot by friendly fire. On the trek
back to our unit we were cold and hungry.
1 didn’t know w eather to condemn our leader for his stupidity
or bless him for keeping us out harm ’s way. In any case we and
our unit would have been better off if we had stayed in our fox
holes catching some sleep on and off in our miserable holes.a
B e rd o rf...................................................... 10th Armored Division
Beile ........................................................... 90th Infantry Division
Bertrange ...................................................5th Armored Division
Bettborn ......................................................26th Infantry Division
B e tte n d o rf...................................................5th Infantry Diovision
B ig o n v ille ........................ .......................... 4th Armored Division
9th United States Air Force
B o u la id e ......................................................35th Infantry' Division
Brandenbourg ...........................................28th Infantry Division
C le rv a u x ......................................................................G1 Memorial
C o n s d o rf................................................... 10th Armored Division
Consthum . . 28th Infantry Division, 110th Infantry Regiment
D a h l..............................................................80th Infantry Division
Diekirch ................................................................ Liberation Units
Echtemach ...........................................................Liberation Units
E s c h d o rf......................................................26th Infantry Division
EsChi'alzette................................................... United States Army
E tte lb ru c k ........................................................... Patton Memorial
F in d e l........................................................... 4th Infantry Division
Graevenmacher ...................................... 83rd Infantry Division
H e id e rsc h e id ..............................................80th Infantry Division
Heincrschcid ..............................................6th Anrioied Division
Hoesdorf . . . 28th Infantry Division. 109th Infantry Regiment
Hoscheid ,
5th Infantr'^ Division
H o sing en ................................................................ Liberation Units
L a ro c h e tte ...................................................... United States Amiy
L i e l e r ........................................................... 712th Tank Battalion
M a rn a c h ......................................................28th Infantry Division
Marte Lange/Rombach ...........................4th Armored Division
M edernach................................................... 9th Armored Division
M o n tfo rt.................................................................Liberation Units
O s w e ile r.................................................................Liberation Units
P e rle ................................................................. 385th Bomb Group
P e ta n g e .........................................................................1st Fallen GI
Rambrouch .................................................26th Infantry Division
Redange .............................................. 5 11th Engineer Company
R o d en b ou rg ......................................................Ernest Hemingwav
Sandweiler ................................................ 5th Armored Division
Schumanns Eck ...........................1944-45 Liberation Memorial
Steinfort .............................................................. Patton Memorial
S tolzem bourg..............................................5th Armored Division
T roisv ierg es.................................................6th Armored Division
Vianden .............................. 6th Cavalry and 1255th Engineers
W a ld b illig ................................................... 9th Armored Division
Weilerbach ................................................ 5th Infantry Division
Weiler/Putscheid ......................................28th Infantry Division
110th Infantry Regiment
Weiswampach ........................................... 35th Infantry Division
Dwight D, Eisenhower
W in cran e e................................................... 90th Infantry Division
Please check voiir m ailing label to see if vour dues are due
TH E n i'I .G F BU GLE
Febniar\ 20uCi
GENESEE VALLEY CHAPTER
DEDICATES MONUMENT
[The following information was gleaned from an article
written by Mitchell Kaidy, Editor o f the "Bulge Echo, " the
newsletter o f the Genesee Valley Chapter. It was sent to us
by Chapter President Thomas W. Hope.]
On a sunny, autumnal day in November (2005), a great unveiling
took place at Ontario Beach Park facing Lake Avenue—the dedi­
cation of a ten-feet tall white granite monument that will live in
the memories and history o f the Rochester-Monroe County
community.
Members o f the Genesee Valley Chapter had covered the
polished stone market with an authentic WWII parachute owned
by John Cipolla, of Greece, who served with the 101st Airborne
Division. Cipolla and others dramatically dropped the parachute
revealing the granite monolith topped in a colorful offset o f the
circular symbol o f the national Veterans of the Battle of the
Bulge.
Chapter Founding President Dick Brookins, o f the 28th Infantry
Division, observed that the "real heroes were those who never
came home. We owe our lives to them and we will never forget
them." He introduced Gary Beikirch, o f Rochester, who received
the Medal o f Honor as a medic in Vietnam.
In a moving retrospective. Chapter Secretary John Foy, a
machine gunner in the 87th (Golden Acorn) Infantry Division,
declared that those who fought were "from the farms and
factories, offices and schools, the sidewalks o f New York
City to the shores o f San Francisco. For a brief moment in
history, these men held our nation’s destiny in their hands," he
said, adding dramatically, "They did not fail."
Foy, who received the Bronze Star, the Combat Infantryman’s
Badge, and three battle stars, recounted his still-powerful vision
of his assistant gunner feeding bullets into Foy’s machine gun.
Sensing that his gunner had fallen quiet, Foy turned to find that
a bullet had scored a direct hit on him.
"For the most part we were children in our 20’s," Foy said,
"citizen soldiers, draftees, and volunteers-young men hardly
more than boys. The real story o f the Battle o f the Bulge is the
story o f these soldiers and the intense combat action o f the
squads, platoons, companies...around their necks hung their
dogtags and their rosaries; on their heads their steel helmets, and
in their breast pocket was a picture o f the girl back home...."
Sketching conditions during the month-long battle, Foy recalled
that "the ground was snow-covered and frozen solid, the skies
were gray, the days were short, the nights long and frigid. These
are the men you see before you," he said. "It may be hard to
believe, but 60 years ago we were young and tough...for us, the
soldiers who fought in that war and the families o f those who
died, the war will never end."
The memorial reads:
BATTLE O F T H E BULGE
W O R LD W A R II
This memorial is dedicated to the
soldiers who fought in the
bloodiest battle waged by the
American Army in World War II.
It was fitting that the largest battle in American history-w hich
claimed 81,000 killed, wounded and captured 61 years ago—had
erected such an imposing remembrance, drawing a gathering o f
over 300 from the Rochester area, including relatives of some
soldiers killed in action.
Speakers included State Senator Joe Robach, who played a
prominent role in state financing, Monroe County Executive
Maggie Brooks, Rochester Mayor Bill Johnson, Stan Wojtusik,
of the national Veterans of the Battle of the Bulge, the Chapter’s
Founding President Dick Brookins and Secretary John Foy.
Chapter President Tom Hope acknowledged the visionary role
o f Joe Tedesco, whose suggestion of a modest monument
ballooned up to the present tall marker engraved with the words
contributed by the executive com mittee o f the VBOB Genesee
Valley Chapter.
Senator Robach conceded that, "It has been a long work in
progress," but paid tribute to those who persisted to make the
monument a success. "If it were not for these World War II
veterans," he declared, "we would not be here. This memorial
will recognize their sacrifice and help the community show its
eternal appreciation...."
THE BULGE BUGLE
The Ardennes Campaign was fought
in Belgium and Luxembourg
December 16, 1944-January 25, 1945,
forcing the German army back into
Germany and leading the way for
victory in Europe in May, 1945.
600,000 American soldiers
fought in bitter cold and snow.
19.000 were killed and more than
62.000 were wounded, captured
or missing in action.
Presented by their surviving comrades
Genesee Valley Chapter
Veterans o f the Battle o f the Bulge
Executive committee members who forwarded the monolith and
wrote the text included Joe Brandt, Jack Foy, Felix Liebmann,
Bill French, Tom Hope, John Cipolla, Mitchell Kaidy, Dave
Busy, Joe Tedesco, and Marty C occa.n
February 2006
SWAMPED BY THE GERMANS
F ran k J. Creed, Jr.
106th Infantry Division
423rd Infantry Regiment
2nd Battalion
Com pany H
PFC Frank J. Creede, Jr., age 19, was assigned to a heavy
machine gun squad. H Company, 2nd Battalion, 423rd Infantry
Regiment, 106th Division, arrived at Le Havre, France,
December 3, 1944 and replaced the Second Division in the
Schnee Eifel (snow) mountains of the Ardennes, December 11,
1944. The Second Battalion was in reserve in Born, Belgium,
and on December 16, 1944, moved through Schonberg on the
Our River (the border between Belgium and Germany) to plug
a gap in the line caused by the withdrawal of the Second
Division in support of the First Army offensive at Aachen.
We were guarding a heavily wooded, hilly forest on the
western slope o f the Schnee Eifel when the Germans burst
through the lines heading for the Meuse river—objective
Antwerp.
In the frozen forests o f the Ardennes, an army of 250,000 men
with 2,000 pieces of artillery and 980 tanks awaited the hour of
attack at 5:30 a.m., December 16, 1944. This was described as
a quiet sector where no heavy engagement other than patrol
activity was anticipated. Little did we know that two days later
we would be attem pting to retake Schonberg and that
Kamfgruppe Pfeifer o f the 1st SS Panzer Division (Malmedy
massacre) followed by the Fuhrer Begleit Brigade would be
passing through Bom shortly after we moved to the front line.
The quiet ended in a shattering eruption o f fire and steel five
days later; in another two days two regiments and supporting
artillery and armor o f the Golden Lion Division were wiped out.
In those two days the men o f two regiments were engulfed by
the ovei-whelming mighi lhal the Germans' breakthrough spear­
headed.
The story o f the lObth’s disaster started in the foggy dawn on
Dcceinbcr 16 as it occupied [word missing] around the Schnee
Eifel, a locky, wooded ridge 10 miies long and two miles wide
astride the Siegfried line.
The Germans turned their guns then on the 422nd and 423rd
Regiments and followed with irifaiitiy aiiJ iauk abbauils. By
daybreak o f December 17 the Germans had thrown two divisions
into this part o f the front and by mid-morning enemy columns
were swarming around the Schnee Eifel. They swamped the
422nd, 423nd Regiments and the 424th was forced to withdraw.
At the 3:35 p.m. on December 18, the radio said that all units
o f the two regim ents were in need of ammunition, food and
water. Parachuting o f supplies was out o f the question because
o f the fog.
While one German pincer moved through the Losheim gap the
other advanced south o f the Schnee Eifel. The threatened link­
up would surround the two regiments defending the high ground.
The defenders did not com prehend the true situation. Secure in
good positions, they spent a easy day repulsing an occasional
German patrol. Proud o f their ability to hold their ground in
this, their first com bat, they did not realize that they confronted
^
rpnlarpm^nt Kuttalion onri tViot
TH E BU LG E BU GLE
taking place deep on either flank.
Surprise, coupled with dense foe, allowed the German assault
companies to advanccto almost on top o f the American positions
before detection. In some cases the attackers annihilated entire
platoons before they could react.
At only one point did the Germans achieve the type o f clean
breakthrough that "Wacht am Rhein" required. The seven-milewide Losheim Gap provided an east to west invasion route that
the G eim anshad used in 1870, 1914, and 1940. Remarkably, it
was the sector on the Ardennes front most likely held by the
Americans. One-half o f the 14th Cavalry G r o u p , about 900 men.
was responsible for the southern five miles. Normally, they were
attached to the adjacent 106th Infantry.
The enemy were now closing a pair o f pincers on the two
American regiments on the Schnee Eifel. On the morning of 17
December, the second day o f the battle, Gen. Alan Jones
telephoned his Corps commander, Gen. Troy Middleton, at
Bastogne on a bad line, which caused a serious misunder­
standing. Both men were concerned about the 422nd and 423rd
but Middleton was reluctant to sanction a withdrawal and Jones
perhaps gave Middleton too sanguine an impression. By now the
14th Cavalry Group had pulled right back to the north-west of
St. Vith and the German 294th Grenadier Regiment had swung
south to capture Schonberg, cutting the main road from the
Schnee Eifel to St. Vith. Another regiment o f the 18th Division
[word missing] the early morning on the 17th and by 9:00 a.m.
they had linked up with their sister regiment at Schonberg.
The Germans were now concentrating on moving their forces
forward to capture Si. Vith and throughout ihc 17th made no
attempt to attack the 9,000 Americans trapped on the Schnee
Eifel.
Late that night (ien. .lone.s sent a message to his
regiments, telling them to break out to the west and promising
an air drop o f ammunition, food and water. The U.S. troop
carrier aircraft, back at Welford in England, loaded these
supplies and flew out to Belgium, but a lack o f coordination and
drive led to the drop being canceled.
Next day the two regimental commanders agreed to begin the
m.ove west, but from, then onward each regiment acted inde­
pendently and with a steady deterioration in control. The 423rd
tried to attack towards Schonberg, but was stopped by enemy
fire. One battalion became separated from the regiment and was
fired on in error by part o f the 422nd. Eventually 423rd Infantry
surrendered.
The 422nd came to a similar sad end. In moving towards
Schnonberg the regiment lost the way. At daybreak the three
battalions moved out once more and were just crossing BleialfAuw road, when they were hit by tanks from the Fuhrer Begleit
Brigade, H itler’s Bodyguard, then an independent tank brigade
moving up to help a German Division capture St. Vith. At 2:30
p.m. Colonels Descheneaux and Cavender surrendered some
7.000 Americans as prisoners o f war.
The Major General Allen Jones lost communication and be­
lieved his orders were to remain in our existing positions. The
422nd and 423rd regiments were surrounded by the 18th and
62nd Volksgenadier Divisions by December 17, 1944. On
December 19, 1944, at 4:00 p.m. the two colonels surrendered
7.000 men to the Germans. We were without food, water and
ammunition, had no armor and much o f our artillery was
destroyed. General Hasso Von Manateuffell, com mander o f the
5th Panzer army, spent the night o f December 17th in the town
of i)C n o n t)e rg
(Continued on Page 17)
10
February 20uti
Malmedy Massacre
k
Artist
Sgt. Howard Brodie ‘45
Five nights after what came to be known as the Malm6dy Massacre, a
heavy snow fell, mercifully blanketing the bodies of the eighty-six dead'
(seventy-two in the field where the main massacre occurred) and tem­
porarily concealing the evidence of the most heinous crime inflicted on
A m erican troops during the course of the war in Europe.
Charles B. MacDonald
Author of
A Time For Trumpets
THE BULGE BUGLE
II
February 2006
24 HOUR EXPERIENCE
OF A COMBAT MEDIC
by C.A. "Doc" Baumley
2nd A rm ored Division
41st A rm ored Infantry Regiment
.Ird A rm ored Infantry Battalion
Com pany H, Medical Detachment
During one o f many phases o f combat in the Battle of the Bulge,
when attached to the 1st Platoon, H Company, 3rd Armored
Infantry Battalion, 41st Armored Infantry Regiment, 2nd
Armored Division, as their Company Aidman, the Company was
assembled in a Village with jum p off at day break. During this
time a squad leader named Russell approached me and said
"Doc, I am not going." As a trained Medic it did not take but
a second to realize that he was or could be a dangerous person.
N ot to disturb him in anyway. I said Sgt. Russell give me your
weapon for I may need it later. ! guess having confidencc in me
he handed it over without hesitation.
Any Combat Infantry veteran knows they have good repose
with their Medic. 1 immediately reported the matter to Platoon
Sergeant Barker and in turn he notified the matter to Platoon
Leader 1st Lt. Hugh Fitzhugh. Sgt, Russell was sent back to the
Aid Station to receive professional treatment for Combat Fatigue.
The Company crossed the IP on time and arrived to the edge
o f the Village \vithout assy casualties. Laier on a rifleman was
hit by a sniper as he crossed from one house to the other.
Someone called for a Medic. As 1 pressed by Sgt. Barker going
to the injured, he grabbed me and said, "Hold it Doc. if you go
to him now you will be laying by his side." We were both
behind the house near him and Barker told him to play dead or
he would be shot again. The sniper was spotted and taken out
by a rifleman. I then got the injured behind the house and
treated him for flesh wounds and sent him back to the Aid
Station.
Later in the day while clearing the house again someone called
for a Medic. 1 went to the side o f the injured and found that he
had been shot in the left cheek. As I was preparing to treat him
1 looked up and there stood a German Soldier pointing his rifle
at us. I imm ediately turned my Red Cross Arm Band toward
him to let him know that 1 was a Medic. At this time the
situation looked bad. My patient was aware o f the situation and
1 whispered to him we had to get into another room for I knew
Sgt. Turner was at the window and could protect us. 1 told him
he had to help me move him, this we did immediately. The
German rolled a grenade into the room. Guess this was our
lucky day as it was dud or he failed to pull the pin for it did not
explode. Sgt. Turner took out the German and 1 moved my
patient outside and behind the house. As luck would have it
things were pretty quiet and I was able to stay with my patient
and keep his airway passage cleared from the bleeding from his
wound. He was never unconscious. Litter bearers were called
and he was taken back to the Aid Station. His name was Pvt.
Rigby.
We began to receive heavy artillery and mortar fire. There was
a dead horse nearby and everyone was sweating it out if one of
the rounds hit the horse and we would get showered with you
kiiOw wliai. Ai iiiib lime I observed to our right flank men trom
THH BU LG E BUGLE
the 2nd Platoon running to the rear. At one point all o f them
were falling to the ground. My thoughts were the enemy was
picking them off one at a time. 1 was unable to see them get up
and keep running. 1 found out later they were tripping over a
fence wire that was under a knee deep snowdrift.
Word came down that we were to move back to the tree line
to our right rear and setup into a defensive position. The report
was that a superior force o f German troops and tanks were ap­
proaching Ihe other side o f the Village. This we did and
received heavy artillery fire all during the night.
1 was assigned a foxhole with a rifleman and lucky enough to
get a two-holer with over head cover. Anyone that has been in
this situation knows that without overhead cover there is no
protection from the burst.
During the night the rifleman that shared my hole was pulled
away for some reason. Sometime later while crouched down in
my hole, 1 heard foot steps and something fell into the hole. My
first thought was grenade, due to the earlier experience with a
grenade. All 1 could do was hold my breath and hope for the
best. Nothing happened so it must have been a rock. The
footsteps were these o f the rifleman coming to get me.
Just before day break word came down for us to assemble to
a designated area to regroup. As we were moving through the
forest, 1 came upon an injured soldier that had been previously
treated by a Medic and awaiting litter bearers. 1 hated to leave
him, but had to move with my unit. 1 did give him a shot of
morphine to help prevent pain and shock. He was not a member
o f our unit.
Ijpon arrival to tnc asscriiDly area, l was told tnat I was
supposed to be dead. The person thought to be me. was my
pood hiiHriv Rilly F Rpnnett whn was the 2nd Pjafoon Medic
He and I joined the Army .lune 26, 1943, at then Camp
Blanding, Florida.
This 24 hours was one o f the luckier ones that we had during
the Battle o f the Bulge, but the loss o f a fellow Medic was a bad
one.c
N o n C E TO
CHAPTER PRESIDENTS...
LOOKING FOR
NEW MEMBERS*’.
LOOK NO FURTHER...
T hey’re right there in your own chapter. Last
year we did a study of chapter m em bership and
w hat did we find? W e found th a t there are more
non-national m em bers in some of the chapters
than there are those w ho are members of national.
So, come on...flush ’em out. They’re sitting right
next to you and we need their su pport.□
February 2UU6
divisions in their path.
The fighting was fierce, our Battalion would constantly move
out, set-up firing positions discharge hundreds o f rounds, move
out, set-up and fire again. This would go on day in day out for
two three weeks without a warm break. The Battalion Comman­
der would reminding us from time to time to think about the
infantry and armored units up on the front lines slugging it out
with German tanks and elite well trained mechanized infantry.
Saying, "If you think you got it bad, think about the boys up
front." the colonel was a good man we all liked him a lot.
Interesting enough after reading the story about the 146th
Engineer Combat Battalion in the August 2004 Bulge Bugle
newsletter, we too were tasked with augmenting some men from
the 941st Fiel Artillery to the 38th Cavalry Reconnaissance
Squadron (Mechz). It was a successful attempt to block and
delay the advance o f the ruthless Col. Peiper’s 1st SS Panzer
Division and advanced elements o f the 326 Volksgrenadiers.
Two o f the 15 men whom were out o f Services Battery were
from my hometown, Homer Hewitt and George Landry o f Man­
chester, New Hampshire. We learned they all earned the
"Distinguished Service Badge" for their actions. Once again
word came down that it was Col. Peiper’s forces that had
intercepted and captured a large group o f U.S. soldiers most of
which were artillerymen driving south along with elements o f the
7th Armored Division. Under orders they were herded into a
large snow covered meadow and gunned down with machine
guns and automatic weapons left to freeze in the snow.
The men o f the wire details out o f Headquarters were Henry
Plante, Horace Abbercrumbie, John Busse, Peter Olean, George
Pasqual, Hang Henderson, John Busse, knee-high, and m yself to
name just a few who were under supportive vigilance o f Camile
Cevalier, Harvey Lessard, Lester Bloom and Ralph Hooper. We
were always under constant threat o f German snipers, land mines
and booby traps. Each time we were sent out to lay or repair
broken communications wire we all had to keep a watchful eye
for these personal hazards. 1 later received the Purple Heart for
wounds received when our weapons carrier hit a German AT
land mine, killing one wounding four.
Our first up close encounter with German armor scared the
living daylights out o f us all. The wire detail was outrunning
new lines up forward to a new OP. Headquarters had marked
the roadway (if tracked snow and mud dug-out by heavy armor
and trucks constitute a road) guiding us to the OP. All morning
we would see our small truck and armor convoys passing us
while we were working on the wire placement. We later would
hear an echoing sound coming from the thick dense forest just
ahead and from both sides o f us, metal clanking and squealing
sounds muffled with low rumbling engines moving around just
on the other side o f the tree lines. We believed it was our guys
moving into defensive positions, perhaps digging in waiting for
others from division, we just kept on working, it was snowing
cold, wet and muddy.
We were taking a quick smoke break while heating up a couple
o f cans o f beans (we would placed them on the exhaust manifold
o f our running truck) then we heard heavy artillery and mortar
barrages. Next came machine gun and rifle fire, it got closer and
closer still we were unaware o f the danger we were in. One of
the guys said "Armand, we should saddle-up and get out of
here." Good idea! As we started to load our tools into the truck
we turned to the tree line and saw G Fs running out from the
forest slipping,
(Continued)
AS I REMEMBER
By A rm and F. Boisseaui
941st Field A rtillery Battalion
V
Corps, F irst United States Army
I would like to share my small story with you and the rest o f our
Battle Veterans. Hopefully I’ll hear from other Veterans whom
were also there, and may know more about my Battalion’s
history. After 60 years my memory is no longer what it used to
be, my son has researched as much as he could with some
success but we believe there’s more to the unit’s history. This
much we do know the 1st Battalion, 941st Field Artillery was
build from the 172nd Fiel Artillery Regiment and the 773rd
Field Artillery Battalionn was built o f elements from both the
172nd and the 941st.
It all started when our outfit assigned to the 1st Army, V
Corps, V Corps Artillery, 406th Field Artillery Group, 30th
Division Artillery serving in the 1st Battalion, Head­
quarters/Headquarters Battery, 941st Field Artillery (heavy)
Commanded by Lt Col John F. Ahern. We were ordered out to
advance on the German positions marshaling along the Belgium
German boarder, in direct support of the 38th Cavalry
Reconnaisance Squadron (mechz) and advanced units of the 30th
Infantry Division from 16 to 21 December, 1944. We set up
firing positions in the vicinity o f towns called Venwegen,
Monschau, Eupen, Hofen, Niveze, Longfaye, Hockai,
Cockaifagne. Our call-sign was "Vineyard", and 1 was assigned
to Headquartrs Battery as forward lineman and assistant switch­
board operator on the wire detail. From time to time we would
set up o p ’s and assist after-action artillery surveying teams.
G2 Headquartrs had advised the Battalion Commanders o f the
(186th, 941st and 955th) to take heed about enemy infiltrations
w e’re told some specialized/English speaking Germans were
dressed as American M P’s and regular G l’s disrupting commun­
ications and sabotaging roadways. The A rdennes-a heavily
rugged forest-grown region that expanded from eastern France,
to southeast Belgium and down along to Luxembourg. There
were a few good roads and mnany defines, the terrain was very
rugged-not well suited for towing 155’s and the new 4.5" guns.
Everywhere we went there were large fields of ice/snow, cold/
freezing rain and thick sticking mud. We endured the cold, first
it would snow then snow again. It seemed never to stop for days
on end. To this day cold w eather does not set well with me.
We all hoped this campaign would be over by Christmas, 1 had
just spent my 24th birthday (December 8th) with two buddies
huddled underneath a burned out, destroyed Army truck in the
freezing snow/rain hoping to win the war soon and go home. It
was not to be, the Germans launched their major offensive
against the allies early 16 December 1944 and hit us hard.
There was a full scale assault against our own positions,
temporarily repulsed by forward elements of the 38th Calvary,
some ack-ack guns, and a few 105’s. It gave the rest o f the
battalion time to advance in the opposite direction to regroup and
return fire covering the retreat o f the forward elements that were
holding the line. Not sure where the 186th and the 955th Field
Artillery Battalions were at this time. In the Ardennes Forest of
Belgium we learned the Germans broke through many thinly
held American lines and drove toward the English Channel
heading for the Port o f Antwerp nearly destroying two American
THE BU LG E BUGLE
13
February 2006
AS I REM EM BER
(C o n tin u a tio n )
trip p in g and falling running as fast as they go hoUowing at the
lop o t th eir lungs "Tanks, G erm an Tanks"!
T his w as the first tim e w e saw G erm an Tanks in action, what
we saw earlier w ere burned and destroyed hulks o f either M ark
II and III P anzers but, here we w ould learn w ere the heavy Mark
V Panthers and M ark VI Tigers. T hey w ere the biggest arm ored
m ach in es w e ’ve ever seen, cannons blasting m achine guns tiring
crash in g through the tree lines. A rm ed only with sidearrns and
carbines w e w ere no m atch for w hat w as heading our way so we
did the next and only best thing...bug the hell out!! No tim e to
pick-up, dropped everything even left the truck running in place.
(W e had a u tility trailer and extra spools o f w ire hanging o ff o f
both). W e finally m ade H eadquarters and reported w hat happen
then learned that the G erm ans had broken through our lines and
w as pushing us back.
The w hole battalion started bugging-out, jeeps, w eapons
carriers, 6 x 6 ’s, M3 H alftracks tow ing 105’s and trailers, M 5's
(hs) tractors tow ing big boys the 155’s and the new 4.5" gums.
A ck-A ck gun crew s, am bulances, m edics, m aintenance an ser­
vice personnel. M P ’s directing traffic, security team s setting up
m ach in e gun and m ortar em placem ents (serving as a first line o f
defense) against the advancing G erm ans. It d id n ’t appear to be
chaos, m ore like w ell "orchestrated" confusion, everybody had a
jo b to do and th a t’s w hat we w ere doing. T he Battalion had
trained for this S tates-side w hile on field m aneuvers in Florida,
M ississippi, L ouisiana, T exas and desert training in southern
C alifo rn ia at C am p Iron M ountain.
Once the Battalion regrouped wo ';rt up ncvv firing positions, ijobied
heavy security, new O p's and informed Division we were ready tor tire
missions. Orders to fire came, the 441st had three batteries tour guns
each—( i 2) guns total let loose with such a tremendous explosion of fire
and defending thunuci il ieil like the earth around us was coming apart
at the seams, i'he roar of these guns echoed for many miles around, I
can’t say let alone know what damage we did but. this is for sure (1) we
blasted he (iermans advancement three times harder than what they
dished-out to us, and (2) we made plenty of fox holes for our own G l’s
to tight out o f
An after di_tii)M letioii i V i h t i S2 revealed the y4!st ! ie!d .'\rtillery had
expended over 15.300 rounds into the advancing Germans for the month
of December 1944 with only (4) battle casualties. No idea what the
other two Battalions ( 186th and the 955th) had also fired but, it would
be s a fe io say at least the same it' not more. Ihe Cierman army had
surely paid dearly for this mistake, and we were very glad lo have
obliged them with extreme predigests Within three months (November.
December anri Ifiniiftry') we set up headquartrs and firing positions
through towns known as Hemmeres, Courtil. Tillet, Venwegen, Mont.
Vossenack. Rohren. Wiltzfeld, Rotgen. Honsfeld and Winterscheid. If
there were others I've long forgotten their names.
I wish to express my most sincere humble appreciation for being able
to serve with the men of the 941st Field Artillery. If not for their
courage and dedication I feel I would not be here alive today writing
this letter. For all VBoB’s its an honor to have served with you. it was
a good fight and hopefully with (Jod’s grace not worth repeating. A
special thanks to Harry Plante (deceased) and Horace "Abbie"
.^bbercrumby of Headquartrs Battery—two men \vlio taught me well and
became my good friends. I welcome all who can correspond helping to
validate your story, good bad or indifference. Would appreciate hearing
from anyone who served in the 187th and 406th Field Artillery (iroups
as well as the 186th. 941st and 955th Field Artillery Battalions. .As we
used to sav in the Guard "Load with Cannister. 'o
T H E BULGt-: lU IG l.E
. Parned It!! Why not oe part of the eto*
for Combat InlSantryn^-'
M em bership requirem ents; T he applicant m ust
h ave b ee n aw ard ed the C o m b at Infantry B adge a s
certified to by official notation on the ap p lican t’s DD214, C»fficial Army O rders, or o th er official d o cu ­
m ents. Applicant m ust attach a copy of such d o cu ­
m entation to this Enlistm ent (M em bership) A pplica­
tion. D ues are $20.00 for t-wo y ea rs or $75.00 fo; a
life m em bership. W e do not h av e a o n e (1) y ear
m em bership.
For m ore infonnation an d m em b ersh ip applica­
tion p le a se visit our w eb site at w w w .cibassoc.com
or contact;
Daniel R. Sankoff, Major, C.I.A.
National M em bership Officer
236 D anby Road
Lehigh A cres, FL 33936-7531
E-mail; silverfoxx236@ aoi.com
A
VCQi TUE
K O M StK St,
KK)OuJ UJUO A ll CJUPSO\_T»\ERS
Do you know a Bulge v eteran
w ho d o esn ’t belong to V BOB?
A sk him to join...w e need his su p p o rt.
14
I'cbruarv 20(ih
Remembrance & Commemoration
Joseph F. Zimmer, 87th Infantry Division, spoke on reflections
o f the Battle o f the Bulge [elsewhere in this issue],
LtCol Shehab’s remarks closed the Commemorative Dinner.
A DVD presentation entitled "A Tribute to Those Who Fought
in the Battle o f the Bulge," created by Robert Rhodes, was
shown after dinner in the banquet room.
On Friday, December 16, 2005, attendees proceeded by
chartered bus from the hotel to a Ceremony o f Remembrance
and Wreath Laying at the WWII Memorial in Washington. Mrs.
Louis Cunningham and Mrs. William Bearisto laid the wreath in
front o f the Battle o f the Bulge inscription. From the memorial,
members proceeded to the Tomb o f the Unknowns in Arlington
Cemetery to meet up with other VBOB members for the
ceremony. At the Tomb, all in attendance were privileged to
witness the impressive military par excellence o f the Changing
o f the Guard (3rd U.S. Infantry Honor Guard). The personal
appearance, dress uniform, and rifles were meticulous. The
Guard was a work o f precision, cadence, shouldering rifle, and
changing o f position o f rifle were done in a flawless manner.
The Sergeant o f the Guard reminded the audience to stand,
refrain from loud talking, and remain silent out o f respect to the
sanctity o f this hallowed memorial.
To the right o f the Tomb, led by a "Buck" Sergeant, the
relieving guard was meticulously scrutinized from head to toe,
front to rear, and his rifle was likewise thoroughly inspected.
After the inspection procedure, the sergeant led the relieving
guard, in coordinated cadence, to the center o f the Tomb where
the change took place. The relieved guard gave the order, "All
orders remain the same." The sergeant and the relieved guard,
in cadence, departed the area. The Tomb bears the inscription:
H E R E REST IN H O N O R E D G L O R Y AN A M ERICA N
SO L D IER K NOW N BUT TO GOD.
At 1105 VBOB President George Chekan and VP M ilitary
Affairs Stanley Wojtusik, escorted by the Sergeant o f the Honor
Guard, laid a wreath at the base o f the Tomb. A U.S. Army
Band bugler sounded "Taps. " The sergeant and the bugler then
departed the area.
From the Tomb o f the Unknowns, VBOB members and friends
walked to the VBOB marker opposite the Amphitheater. Presi­
dent Chekan presided over the proceedings. VP W ojtusik led the
Pledge o f Allegiance. John Bowen, VBOB Historian, offered a
prayer in remembrance o f our fallen comrades who fought and
died in the BOB. Ralph Bozorth, Associate Member, paid
tribute to those who made the supreme sacrifice by reading a
poem entitled "Please Remember Me." [copy elsewhere in
newsletter] Martin Sheeron, 53rd Field Hospital, and Robert
Phillips, 28th Infantry Division, placed the wreath at the VBOB
Memorial. A bugler from the U.S. Army Band rendered "Taps. "
President Chekan closed the ceremonies.
Following these services, members and friends proceeded back
to the hotel for a reception and luncheon. President Chekan
introduced the newly-elected VBOB Executive Council Officers.
Past President Lou Cunningham, 106th Infantry Division,
conducted the swearing in ceremony. Newly-installed President
Stan Wojtusik gave an acceptance speech and adjourned the
ceremonies.
61st Anniversary o f the
Battle o f the Bulge
D ecem ber 16, 1944 - Jan u ary 25, 1945
On W ednesday, December 14, 2005, veterans, family members,
and friends arrived at the Fairview Park Marriott Hotel, in Falls
Church, Virginia. Registration took place in the Hospitality
Room, which was decorated by Dorothy Davis, Robert Phillips,
John and Mary Bowen, and Martin and Phyllis Feldman. The
Hospitality Room contained many books, magazines,
memorabilia, etc., about the Battle of the Bulge. Friendships
with old friends were renewed and new friendships were made.
A private area in the hotel restaurant was reserved for the
members in attendance.
Thursday, December 15, 2005, attendees were given a guided
bus tour o f Washington, D.C., with a stop at the WWII
Memorial. Other sites included the Federal Triangle, Canadian
and British Embassies, The White House, the Capitol and the
Library o f Congress. Lunch at Union Station was on your own.
Shopping was available at Union Station which contained a
model railway exhibit from Norway. Bus returned attendees to
the hotel.
Thursday evening, the Commemorative Banquet was held in a
ballroom o f the Fairview Marriott Hotel. The program began
with a welcoming address by M aster o f Ceremonies LtCol Alfred
Shehab, Ret., 38th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron. Presenta­
tion o f the Colors were made by members o f the Fife and Drum
Corps and the Color Guard o f the 3rd United States Infantry
(The Old Guard). Stanley W ojtusik, 106th Infantry Division, led
attendees in the Pledge of Allegiance. The Color Guard retired
the Colors. John Bowen, Chaplain’s Assistant, gave the Invoca­
tion. George Chekan, President o f the Veterans of the Battle o f
the Bulge, 9th Infantry Division, thanked VBOB member and
friends for attending this solemn Remembrance and Commemor­
ation o f the 61st Anniversary o f the Battle o f the Bulge.
Robert Phillips, 28th Infantry Division, offered a toast to those
who served in the BOB.
John McAuliffe, 87th Infantry Division, offered a toast to the
grateful people of the Kingdom of Belgium and the Grand
Duchy o f Luxembourg.
Demetri "Dee" Paris, 9th Armored Division, offered a toast to
all o f those serving our country.
W. Glenn Yarborough, 2nd Armored Division, offered a toast
to our fallen comrades.
A bugler from the U.S. Army Band rendered "Taps."
The after-dinner program consisted o f greetings from Monique
Thill, Consul, Embassy o f Luxembourg; BGen Dany Van de
Ven, Military Attache, Embassy of Belgium; and Paul Goffm,
Belgium/American Association.
LtCol Shehab introduced guest speaker John C. Metzler, Jr.,
Superintendent Arlington National Cemetery. Mr. Metzler spoke
about repairing The Tomb of the Unknowns, the addition of
burial sites at Arlington, and the proposed new VBOB Memorial.
Dorothy Davis, 57th Field Hospital, presented commemorative
plates, inscribed with the Battle of the Bulge dates to John
Bowen, Robert Rhodes and Ralph Bozorth for their efforts in
presenting video-audio programs in the hospitality and banquet
rooms.
TH E BU LG E BUGLE
M arty Sheeron
53rd Field H ospital
15
February 2006
PLEASE REMEMBER ME
1 fired the first shot at Concord
A shot heard all around the Earth.
We gave up our lives so that
Freedom and Justice was given its birth.
Reinember me, America, for 1 was once your son
1 fought and died at Valley Forge with George Washington.
I was there at Gettysburg on that tragic, tragic day
When brother fought against brother-the blue against the gray.
I rode with Teddy Roosevelt on the charge up San Juan Hill
Some came back to fight again—but I just lie there still.
I went to France with A.E.F. to bring the peace to you
1 was twenty-one and full o f fu n -I never saw twenty-two.
I’m still here at Pearl Harbor since that December seventh day
o f infamy.
Lying silently with my shipmates on the Oklahoma, the Utah,
and the Arizona at the bottom o f the sea.
D-Day, June 6th, 1944, we hit the beaches of Normandy
And we fought uphill every inch of the way.
We routed the Germans and hurled them back
But what a terrible price we had to pay.
I served on a U.S. submarme, the bravest of the brave
Until a German depth charge gave us a watery grave.
1 bombed the Ploesti oil fields, they blew with one big roar
But in the attack we were hit with f ia c k -l’ll never bomb
anymore.
I helped fo raise the flag on !wo Jima
And it just lifted our spirits oh so high.
But the cost o f this island took its toll
It was the lives o f 4,000 Marines and I.
In Korea I heard the CO shout. W e’ll make i t - l ’m sure we
will."
I lost my life to try and take a spot called Pork Chop Hill.
Vietnam! Vietnam! When will we ever learn?
I’m one o f the sixty thousand who never will return.
I left my town, my wife, my kids, and my home so cozy and
warm
1 was killed in a scud attack in a war called "Desert Storm."
And so in my eternity my thoughts are all for thee
I'll never forget my Am erica—1 pray she remembers me.
John J. DiRusso
15th United States A ir Force
4S5lh Bomb O ro u p
Conshohocken, Pennsylvania
Arlington Cemetery, December 16, 2005, President
George Chekan and VP, Military Affairs, Stanley
Wojtusik, escorted by the Sergeant o f the Honor
(luard, prepare to lay a wreath at the base o f the
tomb.
General Skorzeny in the Battle of the Bulge gave his infiltrators
this advice on how to imitate an American:
1. slouch
2. chew gum
3. relax against the wall
4. put hands in pockets
5. say, “ Go lay an egg” “ So’s your old man” “ Go crap
in your hat, buddy”
—Ardennes: The Secret War
T f you ain ’t A irborne you ain ’t Shit."
Old Airborne Proverb
TH E B U l.G E B U G L F
Arlington Cemetery, December 16. 2005. Marty
Sheeron, 53rd Field Hospital, and Robert Phillips,
28th Infantry D ivision, getting ready to place a wreath
at our VBO B Memorial.
16
l'cl)ium> 200(1
(Continued from Page 10)
SW AMPED BY THE GERMANS
which was behind us on the Schonberg-St. Viih road.
We slept the first night in a churchyard in Prum, marched to
Bitburg and to Gerolstein and spent four days in 40’ x 8’ box
cars arriving at Stalag IX B, Bad Orb, on December 25, 1944.
There was no Christmas dinner waiting for us.
While we were in the Rail Marshaling Yard at Koblenz, British
Mosquito bombers bombed a half mile from our line of cars and
we were staffed by an American plane in Stalag IX B, 37 miles
north o f Frankfurt.
1 lost 32 pounds on 600 calories a day. 1 was liberated April
2, 1945, back in New York April 28, 1945 and home in San
Francisco on V.E. day.n
LONE STAR CHAPTER
ON VETERANS DAY
Members in the Dallas-Fon Worth and surrounding areas
participated in this year’s Veterans Day Parade as they have for
the last fi.ve years.
WWII Memorial, December 16, 2005, Mrs. Louis
Cunningham and Mrs. William Bearisto laid a wreath
in front o f the Rattle o f the Bulge inscription.
Pictured in the Humbee: left to ri^hi—Charles Kam, Cecil
Gilliam, and Paid Schreck.
Cecil reports that the parade was good and the weather was
cooperative. I'here was good publicity for the service men and
women and the veterans and the parade was a great successa
Boot camp advice to new recruits:
Don’t Worry
If you’re not in the army and you’re at home
D on’t worry.
If you are in the army, but you’re in the States,
D on’t worr>’.
If you are across, but you’re in the rear Unes,
D on’t worry.
If you’re in the front lines, but you’re not shot,
D on’t worry.
If you arc shot, you can’t worry, so—
D on’t worry.
_ r .i
December 16, 2 0 0 5-Joh n M cAuliffe. 87th Infantry
D ivision, admires the beautiful VBO B wreath at the
WWII Monument.
"W alking is m an’s best medicine."
Hippocrates
n i E BULGE BUGLE
n
Februarv 2uO&
MEDICS IN THE BULGE
further to the rear. Here he may be given an emergency
operation. Then he is taken to an evacuation hospital further
back for first class attention." Aid stations had no beds and were
equipped only with bare essentials.
After patients were
diagnosed and treated, information was jotted down on a card,
which was attached to a buttonhole on the patient’s coat.
Litter carrying was hard, exhausting work and often only two
bearers were on hand. Glen Ghrist, Jr., a medic with the 32nd
Battalion, 3rd Armored Division, recalled carrying wounded GIs
near Sart, Belgium: "It was cold as hell—some survived the cold.
Captain Duffy and I volunteered to get some wounded soldiers
from a field which was under artillery fire. We had to wade a
small stream to get the two soldiers and bring them back to the
jeep. We carried them on our shoulders, sometimes crawling,
sometimes running, to get the hell out o f there."
It was not unusual for battalion surgeons to occasionally act as
litter bearers. Keith Winston wrote o f his unit being short of
litter bearers in emergencies: "If an em ergency arises your
position means nothing.
If it calls for five litter teams
immediately. Doc and 1 will go up and haul. He and I were
doing it one day with no facilities at all."
During medical training, army medics received training in the
use o f the carbine and .45 pistol since some medics went to the
Pacific where the Japanese had not signed the Geneva
Convention. Some also carried weapons in the ETO on certain
occasions. Donald Ratliff, 7th Infantry Division medics, once
captured a German in Vielsalm, Belgium.
"One night in
Vielsalm, Belgium, we went into a house to set up a battalion
aid station. One o f the men opened a closet door and a German
soldier was sitting on the floor. He quickly surrendered when
one o f the men showed a .45 pistol." Although medics in the
ETO were not armed, many medics carried pistols for self­
protection.
For the most part the Germans respected the rules o f land
warfare and did not shoot at combat medics while they did their
first aid work and litter bearing. Medic Philip Hahn, o f the
Medical Detachment, 13th Field Artillery Observation Battalion,
recalled an extraordinary situation in which his German cousin
in a German field artillery position observed an American army
aid station near Walheim, Germany: "The last towns we were
in before the Bulge were small towns near Aachen. One was
Walheim. After the war, I visited my cousin who was a lieu­
tenant in the German field artillery. In looking over his records,
I saw the name o f Walheim. He said that he had the crossroads
zeroed in—he knew exactly what farm house we had for an aid
station because o f the red cross hanging from a window and that
there were probably German civilians living there."
There were many exceptions to this. Peter Couvillion, 9th
Armored Division, served as an evacuation jeep driver in
Luxembourg and recalled one exception: "On the second day of
the Bulge after all our line companies had been surrounded, we
attempted to contact "C" Company. Enroute, we encountered a
battle line o f Germans. They did not shoot at us. On this
mission we evacuated 16 wounded and left the slightly wounded
behind.... Early that morning my assistant and I contacted our
"B" Company. We found the company medic. Leading us to
where he had some wounded, a sniper shot both the company
medic and my assistant. Both died before I could get to them.
Men from the platoon found the sniper and shot him."
Two types o f casualties occurred in the ETO that troop
commanders were
(Continued)
By Ralph Storm
11th A rm ored Division
21st Arm ored Infantry Battalion
[Thefollowing excerpts are takenfrom the CRIBA website.]
[Excerpted and altered for space] The average American soldier
in WWII first encountered Army medics at Army induction cen­
ters where inductees were given physical examinations. These
men had earlier been examined by hometown doctors, but Army
officials became aware that many local physicians tended to
overlook certain ailments among the prospective inductees which
might have precluded them from becoming healthy soldiers.
Some GIs never went on sick call and were never injured. For
those soldiers in the European Theater who became ill or injured,
there was a huge medical complex in place by D-Day, 1944.
There was no exact way of knowing how many hospital beds
would be needed, but ETO’s Chief Surgeon, Colonel Paul
Hawley, was insistent on building the latest and most elaborate
hospital complex seen in any army in WWII. There were the
mobile hospitals either in tents or in suitable buildings that had
been taken over by the Army. These facilities were near the
fi-ont and provided only patch-up work for the wounded. The
goal was to keep patients alive and sent on to the next hospital
where more sophisticated procedures could be used. The general
hospHals where the patients could be reconstructed and rehabil­
itated, were located in areas more distant from the front in such
continental cities such as Liege, Paris, Dijon, and many cities
and towns in England.
One issue concerning seriously wounded soldiers was whether
some should be sent back to the States on hospital ships.
General George Patton had a somewhat unsympathetic answer to
this question: "If you have two wounded soldiers, one with a
gunshot wound of the lung, and another with an arm or leg
blown off, you save the son-of-a-bitch with the lung wound and
let the god damned son-of-the-bitch with an amputated arm or
leg go to hell. He is no god damned use to us any more." The
ETO medical policy on such cases what that if a patient needed
six months (180 days) or more of hospitalization, he would be
sent to the States. Later, during the Bulge, when beds were
scarce, the policy was shortened to four months.
Keith Winston, 100th Infantry Division, wrote how it was done
under ideal conditions: "A boy gets hurt on the line. Within a
minute or less a telephone message is sent back to our forward
aid station, a distance of 300 to 1,000 yards from the front,
where a sergeant and four litter bearers are always on hand.
They rush right up to the line with a litter.
"During this time, the company aid man is administering first
aid on the spot, usually consisting of stopping the bleeding with
sulfanilamide powder externally, bandaging and giving wound
pills internally. By that time, another litter team is there and
carries the casualty to the nearest point where a jeep can travel,
anywhere from 25 to 3,000 yards, depending on conditions. He
is then rushed to the aid station-one to three miles behind the
line. Here the physician removes the first aid bandage, makes a
proper diagnosis, applies a more permanent bandage, administers
blood plasma if needed, and in severe cases, gives morphine.
Next the patient is rushed by ambulance to a clearing station
THE BULGE BUGLE
18
February 2006
M EDICS IN TH E BULGE
(Continuation)
not well prepared for. In 1941, the army lacked a definition, a
treatment system, or even a name for its psychiatric casualties.
These casualties by the end of the war would amount to over
150,000, or an average for every three men killed or wounded,
one other soldier became a combat exhaustion case.
Medical writer Albert Cowdry described some of the symptoms
o f the soldiers with combat exhaustion; "Intolerable weariness
and baseless alarm. Some were in a stupor and withdrawn, some
tense and violent, some suffered from Parkinson-like tremor or
from delusions.... They were beyond self-control and orders and
threats meant nothing. Weeping, shaking, curling up in the fetal
position...they had ceased to be soldiers for a time."
Veteran war correspondent Ernie Pyle was deeply touched
when he met two GI psychiatric casualties: "...two shock
cases...staggering down the road. They were not wounded but
were completely broken...the kind that stab into your heart.
They were shaking all over, and had to hold on to each other
like little girls when they walked. The doctor stopped them.
They could barely talk, barely understand. He told them to wait
down at the next corner until we came back, and then they could
ride. When they turned away from the jeep, they turned slowly
and unsteadily, a step at a time, like men who were awfully
drunk. Their mouths hung open and their eyes stared, and they
still held onto each other. They found more war than the human
spirit can endure."
Once during the Bulge, General Matthew Ridgeway encount­
ered a dysfunctional sergeant: "An hour later in the same spot,
the tough aiiuoiiic General Ridgeway came under enemy tire,
and a sergeant nearby became almost hysterical. He threw
hirncgit' ’Hto ths ditcli by ths sids ot'th s rcsd cr^'in^ 3.nci rsvir!^.
I walked over and tried to talk to him, trying to help him get
hold of him self But it had no cffect. He was just crouched
there in the ditch, cringing in utter terror. So I called my jeep
driver. Sergeant Farmer, and told him to take his carbine and
march this man back to the nearest MP and if he started to
escape to shoot him without hesitation. He was an object o f
abjcct co'vvardicc and the sight o f him would have a terrible
effect on any American soldier who might see him."
At times some officers suspected that some soldiers were
feigning their "combat fatigue." Paul Roesch. 28th Infantry
Division platoon leader, alleged that his platoon sergeant had
deserted under the guise of combat exhaustion: "My platoon
sergeant was missing. One sectional leader, a soft-spoken
Georgian T/Sgt Arthur N. Clarke, explained his absence."
Lieutenant Clark said slowly, "Jim left. The first time that
machine gun fired, he handed me his Tommy gun and said he
couldn’t take it any more. He took o ff"
I listened...stunned. "He said for me to take charge o f the
platoon." Clarke continued. I could hardly believe it. The
platoon sergeant was the same man who, less than a week before
when I had first joined the platoon, had stepped forward, his
eyes shifting a bit, and regaled the replacements who had arrived
with me: "Listen you guys," he had barked harshly, "1 don’t
want any of you guys to turn yella, see! A yellow-belly
sonofabitch is worse than a damned Jerry! If you see a man turn
yella and run, shoot him in the back like a dirty dog!"
This I thought was the man who was going to shoot the first
"yellow-belly" in the back. To leave the platoon this way, was
just plain desertion. "Hey, Lieutenant," one of us shouted, "is
that the guy who was going to shoot us in the back?"
THE B U I.G E BUGLE
Albert Cowdrey described the symptoms o f shock in wounded
soldiers: "Shock made the anesthetist’s job especially touchy.
A young man in deep shock had the metabolic rate of an old
man and repeated doses o f morphine, given in the field to kill
pain further depressed his respiration. One in every 40 to 50
wounded men were in shock when they reached the hospital and
the condition seemed to begin a series o f destructive changes
through the body that often ended in death."
Keeping morphine from freezing was another cold weather
problem for company aid men. Once frozen, morphine had no
value and medics had to store their syrettes under several layers
o f clothing to keep them warm. Cold injury which was so
prevalent among line soldiers in the winter of 1944-45 was for
the most part caused by the lack of warm winter clothing and
boots. General Omar Bradley described how this had come
about as a result o f the euphoria that existed among the western
allies in September 1944: "When the rains first came in Novem­
ber with a blast of wintry air, our troops were ill prepared tor
winter time campaigning. This was traceable in part to the Sept­
ember crisis in supply for, during our race to the Rhine, I had
deliberately by-passed shipment o f winter clothing in favor of
ammunition and gasoline. As a consequence, we now found our­
selves caught short, particularly in bad weather footgear. We
had gambled in our choice and were now paying for the bad
guess."
The winter of 1944-45 was the coldest, wettest winter period
western Europe had experienced in 30 years. ...More than
45,000 soldiers were hospitalized as cold injury casualties
between November, 1944, and April, 1945.
Winter warfare in the Ardennes placed a heavy burden on the
hospital
sy stem s
A s a r e s u l t o f h i r t e r r a m p a i g n i n g in t h e
Hurtgen Forest and along the Moselle River, tens o f thousands
o f m.en were already hospitalized in early December with trench
foot.
Hospitals also contained 14,000 German prisoners.
Ordinarily these POWs would have been sent to the States on
troopships, but because the War Department expected an early
victory, the shipment o f prisoners to the States was halted.
ihe iU7th Evacuation Hospital had to be moved from Libin,
Belgium, to Chateau Roumont. After the siege of Bastogne was
lifted, some 1,200 patients were brought into the hospital and ail
told thev handled some 2,700 patients. To relieve the strain on
the Liege hospitals, a dozen hospital trains were running between
Liege and Paris-carrying patients to already over crowded Paris
hospitals.
Sulfa drugs and penicillin contributed remarkably to the saving
of lives in the European Theater. Each Gl in forward positions
carried a tlrst-aid packet, complete with bandage, sulfa pills and
sulfa powder. Sulfa was used to stabilize the bacteria while
penicillin kills organisms. In 1943. penicillin was in short
supply. However, by D-Day the American and British drug
companies produced the amounts needed for the Normandy
invasion.
The ETO Army Medical Service program was both complex
and successful. By March 31. 1945, the total number of medical
personnel had increased to nearly 250,000. Casualties by that
time had reached over 13,000, o f whom 2,200 were killed. The
majority o f those killed, wounded, or captured in combat were
battalion aid men and litter-bearers. It was not unusual for an
infantr>' company to replace 100 percent of its aid men.
The system possessed mobility, and field medics had access to
jeeps, trucks,
(Continued)
19
I-ebruar>- 2UU6
MEDICS IN THE BULGE
it’s gas mask. (You quickly learned not to carry anything that
w asn’t absolutely necessary.) The bag lining soon got very
sticky. I’d chew the combs, extract the honey and spit out the
wax after a good chewing.
In or near Dickweiler, Luxembourg, we came to a farm house
and 1 noticed this five foot high rectangular building with slats
or louvered sides. A small door permitted a stooped entrance.
This turned out to be the largest beehive I had ever seen. It was
to big that you could walk into it and when you did you were
surrounded by honey combs. Here was a large treasure trove of
honey. The bees were dormant and the combs easily removed.
I stuffed my gas mask carrier full and figured I was fixed for
several days.
It didn’t take long to tell the rest o f the squad and soon they
were going and coming from the hive. Now dormant or not the
bees decided to attack the marauders. Soon there were yells
from the looters. The bees were really stinging now. Those that
got stung were moving away as fast as they could.
Mud was the only solace and there are no Purple Hearts for bee
stings.□
(C ontinuation)
half-tracks, and even Sherman tanks for evacuating patients from
forward areas to rear area clearing stations. In contrast to the
German Army which often lacked adequate transport and even
such basic medical needs as bandages (not to mention penicillin),
the U.S. Army Medical Corps in Europe was certainly the best
equipped. The value o f antibiotic was demonstrated by the
smaller death rate from disease as compared to WWl. In WWI,
pneumonia took the lives of 18,000 American soldiers. During
WWII, even during the 1944-45 winter, the coldest and wettest
in 30 years, only 70 GIs died of pneumonia in the European
Theater o f Operations.n
NO PURPLE HEARTS FOR
BEE STINGS
Henry "H an k " Mooseker
87th Infantry Division
347th Infantry Regiment
Company A
WORLD WAR II MUSEUM
NEEDS YOUR HELP
[Thefollowing article appeared in March-April, 2005, issue
o f "The Golden Acorn, " which is the newsletter o f the 87th
Infantry Division.]
The WW ll Museum was moving along on a 200 million
expansion when Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans.
While the Museum itself was damaged by the storm and its gift
shop looted, the major crisis is loss o f ticket revenue. The
Museum operates exclusively on private funding, ticket revenue
and private gifts. Without visitors to buy tickets, it cannot
reopen and continue to tell the story o f WWII.
The Museum is still closed [at the time this information was
received] and visitors to New Orleans are few and far between.
So, if you can help, please send your donation to: America’s
National WWII Museum, d o Bill Frederick, PO Box 2951,
Orlando, Florida 32802. (Bill is a director o f the museum.)□
During the Battle of the Bulge we Dog Faces were constantly
cold almost frozen, (our feet would get frozen, frost bitten or go
black with trench foot), wet and hungry. K-rations hardly
satisfied our hunger and these were downed with remarkable
speed. Sometimes when several K-Rations were provided I’d
loose one or two o f them in a fire fight and this only made
matters worse.
Along with rations we always (almost always) received a carton
of cigarettes once per week and these were used as much to allay
nervous apprehension as they were used to satisfy hunger.
I also remember how the condoms we were issued were put to
good use keeping matches and cigarettes dry. They were also
used to keep the muzzle of our weapon from filling with snow
and ice or mud when there was a thaw. A plugged barrel could
cause an explosion o f the breech which could seriously wound
one’s face. They sure as hell couldn’t be used for anything else.
We searched every beat up house, hovel, cellar and barn for
anything edible. 1 can remember finding Brussels sprouts,
carrots and some potatoes in a root cellar. 1 found a can of fat
(nondescript and could have come from anything) that most
houses stored and used to fry the potatoes, carrots and sprouts in
my mess kit over the square wax candle we were issued. These
candles helped heat up a fox hole if you set them in a niche dug
into the side of the fox hole you happened to be in. Disregard­
ing standing orders not to eat or drink things we found that
wasn’t G1 we gobbled up anything edible. A good find was fruit
and jelly preserves.
Along with what we could scrounge 1 always found bee hives
rewarding. There were many hives in the Ardennes and were
used to pollinate the many orchards in the area. At this time of
the year (winter) it was easy to get at the honey combs as the
bees were dormant. I could quickly wrest a few combs from the
hive and put them in my gas mask bag which had long since lost
THE BULGE BUGLE
Soldiers of Troop C, 87'*' Reconnaissance patrol. ?"
Armored Division, advance into the battle-scarred St.
Vith, Belgium. 24 January 1945
20
February 20(i6
shop used for making parts. In order to secure the front truck
we locked up the wheels and ran a chain to the rear truck.
When the tide started coming back in a line was fired out to us
and we secured that line to the LST. The men on shore used
two Cat D-8s to pull us on to the beach.
The company landed on Omaha Beach and immediately drove
to a bivouac area. That night after a cold supper o f "C" rations,
we made ready for bed as it was getting dark and no fires could
be lit.
However, there was no sleep that night as about 2200 hours all
hell broke loose—anti-aircraftemplacementsopened up all around
and flack was falling like rain. The remainder o f the night was
spent in "foxholes." The following day the remainder o f the
company arrived and after reforming the convoy set out for La
Combe, France. This was to be the bivouac and operational area
for the next few months. The quarters were pup-tents, but were
later replaced by wooden shacks built from lumber salvaged
from the GMC crates.
Thirty-three hours after landing in France the first vehicle to be
assembled on the continent was completed. An achievement
which caused
and Stripes to claim a record set for becom­
ing operational in record time in a combat area. Later on these
operations became so efficient that vehicles were coming off the
line at the rate o f 60 a day. Previously the company had receiv­
ed a citation from Mag. Gen. H.B. Saylor, ETO Ordnance Offi­
cer, for assembling 40 a day. W'e worked seven days a week
from 7;00a.m . until 10:00 p.m., just taking time off long enough
to eat.
All this time the fighting around Si. Lo was at its heigiii. On
the 25th o f July, the men witnessed the 3,000 plane raid on that
rity
T h e same day an American fighter plane accidently
dropped a 250 pound fragmentation bomb right in the middle of
the 148th working area. Luckily it failed to explode and buried
itself 15 feet into the ground.
In November the company finished with their work in France
on the 13th of November an advanced party left for Antwerp,
Belgium. Our commanding officer Capt. Charles Reese, Lt. John
P. Hoben, T/Sgt. Harvey W. Beaver and 1/4 Jasper E Hilley
made up the advance party. The Germans celebrated their arrival
dumping a "Buzzer" right in the middle of the lane in front of
the barracks. Two days later the company followed with full
equipment and materials necessary for setting up another line.
The others followed two days later in three convoys they arrived
at Lake Hofstade, Belgium, on the 16th, 17th, and 18th o f Nov­
ember. We were the first to occupy the summer resort which
was later called Depot 0-654. We were billeted in what was once
a very beautiful summer resort. These were the best living
accommodations since we left the USA. The only discomfort we
encountered was a never ending stream o f buzz bombs passing
overhead nightly during the blitz of A ntw erp- some fell short of
their targets but none caused casualties among the unit.
Work began after the company was set up and we functioned
smoothly. The first job was in Antwerp where a ship load of
vehicles was unloaded. The ship had been waiting 54 days in
Firth o f Clad for the Port o f Antwerp to be cleaned up and
opened. Here again the men sweated out the buzz bombs and
rockets falling all around the dock. We saw many horrible sights
as a result o f the rockets falling—with the crowed streets, many
civilians were literally blown to pieces The vehicles, after being
unloaded, were convoyed to depot 0-654, from there they were
convoyed to the ditterent tronts.
(Lontinued)
WHERE DID ALL
THE TRUCKS COME FROM?
By Lloyd L. Goss, Jr.
148th O rdnance Battalion
Com pany A
For many years I have been reading the WWII Magazine and
other publications—also watching movies on TV. The impression
would be that a 2 1/2 ton trucks used overseas were shipped all
assembled and ready to roll. Never has it been explained that
the majority of trucks were shipped in crates and had to be
assembled in Europe. 1 was a T4 in the 148th Motor Vehicle
Assembly Company. Our company was comprised of 175 men
o f all technical ranks. Our job was to assem.ble the 2 1/2 ton
trucks, jeeps and trailers.
It was never mentioned where these trucks came from except
that they were from the 4049th Quartermaster Truck Company
and the 514th Quartermaster Group. 1 am writing this letter to
let everyone know just where the trucks and other vehicles came
from during the invasion o f France [and in the ETOJ.
On January 8, 1944, we anchored in the Firth ot Clad,
Scotland. The company did not disembark until 4 days later.
That night we boarded a train for Liverpool, England, arriving
in Aintree Liverpool the next morning. The company took up
qiip.rter'; in what were once stables for many fam.ous race horses.
The stables were made quite comfortable with the addition of
stoves and wooden floors. Shortly after everything was set up
and in order, the company began work at Depot 0-629, this work
consisted of spot assembly of 1 ton trailers and 2 1/2 ton GM C’s
with one platoon doing maintenance in the depot maintenance
shop. Our stay was not permanent however! On April 8, 1944,
we were transferred to depot 0-631 located in Bromborough, just
outside of Liverpool. We stayed at Woodslee Manor which was
a three stor>’ castle with sufficient rooms to hold two companies.
The quarters there were much better than the ones we left.
Work soon began, an assembly line was operationed and began
turning out 2 1/2 ton CMC trucks.
A small detachment of men was sent to learn vehicle water­
proofing, this was necessary as all of the company vehicles had
to be waterproofed before crossing the channel. All the T/E
vehicles were drawn, checked and put into operating condition.
A rolling reserve stock of vehicles was also assembled for our
own use in France.
Later we left Bromborough for the Longridge Deveril assembly
area here we were given a brief rest with no duties or details.
This short stay soon ended and the company was loaded onto
seven LST’s at Portland, England, with destination France. The
first thing we saw when we crossed the channel were sunken
ships just offshore. These ships were lost when the first Allied
Troops landed. The LST that 1 was on had two trucks, one other
member from our company and a sailor who operated the LS P.
We were about 200 feet from the beach, the tide was going out
suddenly we struck a sunken LST. We were stranded there for
about 24 hours. Our LST started to buckle in the middle we
thought that the truck in the front was going to go overboard—
that truck was carrying all of our tools which we needed on the
1.
I------ 1.
.
ti
111 m e
w uo
j m e,
i
aa^cuiui^' inn^. 'T1't.iiv,- X-----I H t UULCik B U U L t
21
Fcbruarv 2006
W HERE DID ALL THE
TRUCKS COM E FROM ?
feverishly tired to supply the various companies with ammunition
and supplies.
And, the Medical Detachment, was in grave danger, especially
the Medics assigned to "B" Company.
On or about January 27, 1945, "C" Company moved with the
12th Army Group to Namur, Belgium. A short while later.
Headquarters Company and "A" and "B" Companies joined TForce, and ail went their separate ways into Germany.
T-Force was a unit o f special troops o f the 12th Army Group
selected for specific missions, the 526th was assigned as security
personnel for this unique force. T-Force was a highly mobile
group and traveled extensively throughout Germ any.□
(Continuation)
On December 15th a class II and IV Depot moved on to the
post and began setting up an assembly line. Their supplies began
coming in by the train load and their personnel not being
sufficient in numbers to handle the job of unloading, were
obliged to call on the 148th for assistance. The men worked
twenty four hours a day during the Bulge getting the equipment
unloaded so that more could be brought in.
After the Bulge, the company was engaged in setting up spot
assembly sheds, service sections, warehouse and motor pool.
After these were completed they began to spot assembly 2 for 5
ton and 20 ton trailers. Also some GMC trucks and weapon
carriers. This job lasted until sometime in April.□
DISCHARGED AS A PFC
526TH ARMORED
INFANTRY BATTALION
[Thanks to the determination o f his daughter. Theresa
Gedaro-Fox, PFC ROCCO N. GEDARD, 90TH
DIVISION, 357THIMFANTR YREGIMENT, COMPANY
C, received his sergeant's stripes in a ceremony in
September, o f 2002.]
W ritten by Jam es Ammons and George W endt
Unit Historians
[Rocky sent us the following remembrance.] On January 13,
1945, I as removed from the front lines for the second time with
trench foot (frozen feet). 1 was in the First Aid Tent waiting to
be sent back to the hospital when word came through that the
Germans were counter-attacking. All the wounded that could
fire a rifie were loaded on trucks.
They wrapped my feet in a blanket and put me in the truck.
They drove us as close as possible to the front and unloaded us.
They told us that they expected the Germans try to break out at
this point and we were to hold our positions at all costs. Here
are a bunch o f wounded soldiers along with cooks, bakers, M P’s
and whoever else they could find.
The Germans hit us hard and tried to break through our lines,
but we held on, it was like shooting ducks in a shooting gallery
we shot so many o f them that they finally surrendered. We took
many, many prisoners. We later found out that this was called
the "Battle o f the Bulge" that we protected.
I was picked up and carried to a truck and brought back to the
Aid Station. The soldier next to me looked at me and said
"Rocky". He was my best friend! We grew up next door to
each other. We had gone through school together and graduated
from Portland High School in 1942. I asked him where he was
wounded and he said that he had frozen feet. We rode together
in the ambulance to Verdun, France. There we both were
shipped to England. He went to a different hospital than me. I
never saw him again until he arrived home in 1946. His name
was Reginald Papi and he passed away on September 30, 1974.
[The following article appeared in the October, 2005, issue
o f the battalion’s newsletter "The Pekan Newsletter"]
While in Normandy, the 526th was assigned to the 12th Army
Group. This group consisted of several American and British
Armies and was under the command of General Omar Bradley.
On or about October 26, 1944, the 526th left for Belgium with
a stopover in Verdun, France. From there the battalion went into
Belgium, settling in the Malmedy, Harze, Aywaille area in
eastern Belgium. "C" Company was detached from the battalion
at this point and was assigned to the 12th Army Group
Headquarters in Luxembourg City where they served as personal
security guard for General Bradley and his staff
On December 16, 1944, Hitler shot his last wad of the war by
invading eastern Belgium by the way of the Ardennes Forest.
He hit the weakest point of the front line by attacking the
American 106th Infantry Division. This division was made up
mostly o f raw recruits who had just finished their basic training
in the United States and who had been sent to Europe only a few
days before the Germans mounted their offensive.
All o f the companies of the 526th were involved with fighting
in the Battle of the Bulge, except "C" Company. They were kept
busy protecting General Bradley and his headquarters from the
German assault. Killing General Bradley and his staff was a
German top priority, and, "C" Company can be given credit for
not letting that happen.
"B" Company was hit the hardest, suffering numerous
casualties and many men were taken as Prisoners of War by the
Germans. "A" Company was hit hard at Stavelot, Belgium.
While in the thick o f the fighting in Stavelot they were given
credit for stemming the German advance by setting afire 4
million gallons of American gasoline.
Had the Germans
captured this fuel depot the outcome of the Battle of the Bulge
might have been different.
Headquarters Company was not spared. They had their
problems with a German mine field.
Men from Service
Company were moving targets from the Germans, as they
THE BULGE BUGLE
[Rocky's promotion never reached battalion headquarters
in time for his discharge—so he was discharged as a
private. It's interesting to note that Rocky never wanted to
be promoted to sergeant. "Sergants, " he explained, "kept
dying. "]u
SAVE US M O N E Y -C H E C K TO SEE IF YOUR
DUES ARE DUE. YOUR DUES DATE IS RIG HT
ABOVE YOUR LAST NAME ON TH E LABEL.
22
February 2006
SPEECH BY
MERRY CHRISTMAS
& HAPPY NEW YEAR
CONSTANT GOERGEN, PRESIDENT
From Camille Kohn
President
CEBA
U.S. VETERANS FRIENDS LUXEMBOURG
Thursday, December 15, 2005
D ear A m erican V eterans and Friends:
C hristm as 2005! W hat a w onderful tim e to rem em ber. W hat
a w onderful tim e to be grateful and to honor all those women
and m en in A m erican uniform s w ho som e 61 years AGO, cam e
to our country to liberate L uxem bourg from four and a h a lf years
o f cruel N azi tyranny. W e shall alw ays rem em ber A m erican
V eterans. You are the living legacy o f a painful past and now
you are our true am bassadors o f peace and freedom .
T oday m ore than 60 years ago, are we still realizing w hat
dram a shook our countries and our fam ilies at that tim e? Even
now , are we able to m easure the sacrifices m ade by our
liberators? Even now , are we ready to give a daily thank you to
those w ho sacrificed th eir youth and th eir dream s for our
freedom ? T hese are ju st som e o f the im portant questions we
should be asking ourselves at a tim e w hen any happiness is
fleeting and perishable, at a tim e w hen m en lose sight o f true
hum anism and sacrifice the m ost im portant hum an values on the
altars o f the gods o f greed and degradation.
In the A m erican M ilitary C em etery at H am m , Luxem bourg,
5.076 crosses and Stars o f D avid rem ind us that these young
A m ericans sacrificed their lives for our survival and our well
being. I he m essage these soldiers w ho fell on the front lines of
the A rdennes B attlefield beg us to cherish life, our fam ilies and
our neighbors. T hey im plore us not to refuse anybody the right
to their life and hum an dignity, not to im pose any dangerous
political econom ic or social system on anyone else. This
m essage o f peace, freedom , independence and realization o f
hum an values is jo in e d by the sam e m essage from the thousands
o f G erm an soldiers buried in the G erm an cemeter>’ close by.
Fate m ade them enem ies in th eir w orldly lives, but now they
im plore us from eternity w here they are reunited and united, to
live brotherly life w here selfishness and strife for pow er have no
place.
M ay all they w ho thrive on pow er and dom ination m ediate
over the tom bs in all m ilitary cem eteries strew n over the
countries. M ay they reflect on the m essages o f the m iiiions oi'
lives lost on battlefields from antiquity to today. M ay they learn
the lesson o f history. D ear V eterans, L uxem bourg has not
forgotten. From the depths o f our hearts w e all thank you. We
w ear in our hearts the noble w ords spoken by President Abraham
Lincoln at G ettysburg: "W e highly resolve that these dead shall
not have died in vain. It is for us the living to be dedicated to
the unfinished w ork w hich they w ho fought here, have thus far
so nobly advanced." O ur g ratitude to our dear veterans and
heroes is boundless. W e salute and adore you and invite you to
visit us w henever the m ood strikes you. You have a perm anent
invitation and you are alw'ays w elcom e.
O ur A m ericanL uxem bourg Friendship W eek w ill beheld June 21-26, 2006.
You are alw ays w elcom e to jo in us.
W e w ish you a M erry C hristm as and a peaceful and healthful
new y ear.o
I HH BULGH BUGLH
[Harry Meisel, long time member from Winter Park,
Florida, shares his Christmas and New Year 's greetings
with you. /
A lready before the B attle o f the Bulge began, in N ovem ber
1944, units o f the 28th U.S. Infantry D ivision H eadquarters
stayed in the Luxem bourg A rdennes City o f W iltz. It was on the
5th o f D ecem ber, 1944, when the 28th Signal C om pany (M es­
sage C enter Section) invited the children o f W iltz as their guests
for a Santa C lause Party.
Some days before, they had collected sm all gifts such as
chocolate, cakes and other candies, taken from their own rations
and C hristm as packages from overseas, to give all those fine
things to the Luxem bourg kids,. It was the GI R ichard Brookins,
from Rochester, N ew York, w ho played Santa Claus.
On D ecem ber 5, 1944, 1 was a little boy ol 9 years! 1 never
had gotten chocolate or cakes from you.... But yoou gave me
m uch more! Instead o f candies you gave me back my liberty,
you freed me from the horror o f a terrible dictatorship and not
only m e, but also my parents, my siblings, my hom e village, my
district, my countr}/ even the entire continent, w here 1 am living
till now during 61 years in freedom and peace. 1 owe it to you,
my dear! Please do understand: I owe it to yu and to hundreds
o f thousands o f yur com rades in arm s, to nobody else! Be
proud!
Y our fine present to me in 1944-45 can never be repayed! Not
by w ords and not by letters o f thanks, not be receptions and not
by m onum ents! Let me tell it to you old boy: 1 am most deeply
indebted to you! Beyond your grave!
I ca n ’t help to thank you again b}' this w ay from the bottom o f
m y heart for w hat you had done for me and my fellow
countrym ent. W e wish you and your fam ily: M erry Christm asH appy New Y ear!a
MORE ON SANTA
IN WILTZ
R ichard Brookins recently provided us a copy o f The American
St. Nick, w ritten by Peter Lion, w hich details the incidents in
W iltz m entioned in Mr. K ohn’s com m ents (above).
The book is based on the true story o f soldiers (28th Infantry
D ivision Signal Corps) who donated their gifts from home,
m ilitary cooks who baked sw eets and C orporal Brookins who
borrow ed clothes from the local priest and rode through town as
St. N icolas to delight the children and their parents in Wiltz.
Richard still returns to W iltz to reenact this m uch anticipated
event.
The book w as published by W indR iver Publishing, o f St.
G eorge, Utah. If y o u ’re unable to find one at your local book
store, contact R ichard,at 585-586-4642, and h e 'll be able to help
vou locate one.o
23
Kcbruary 2UUb
INTRODUCTION
TO A TIGER TANK
retreated to safety to som e rear position and we never saw them
again.
We had one non-com , a m ortar sergeant (Pete L ockhart by
nam e), who stopped us all and said, "I’ll shoot the first *$%#
w ho leaves the shelter o f these b u ild in g s -o u r safety is here,
hiding in the buildings and attacking the tank if it dares to com e
into our m idst. O nce, w e leave the protection we have and enter
the open fields, w e ’re like shooting ducks!" W e did stay and by
doing so we discouraged the tank co m m an d er from entering what
w ould have been our trap. The tank w ithdrew and we w ere safe.
Sgt. Lockhart, once the story w as told, w as given a battle field
com m ission and becam e our platoon com m ander.
Further up the road we w ere quartered in another barn and 1
was sent back for m ore am m unition w ith another man. As we
approached the side entrance to this b am a sniper opened fire on
us. M y buddy w as closest to the door and should have been the
poorest target w hile I w as m ore exposed but fate w ould have it—
he w as shot in the stom ach as he turned to enter the barn. At
first it did n ’t appear to be fatal but on tu m in g him over we saw
the gaping hole in his back and he w as gone w ithin m inutes.
T hat w as the closest I cam e to leaving this earth and m ade me
realize how lucky a person could b e.n
By Allen R. Goodman
517th P arachute Regimental Com bat Team
Once the advance o f the G erm ans was stalled at the B attle o f the
Bulge in Belgium in January o f 1945 our responsibility was to
clear any enem y pockets still existing as we traveled East on our
final target w hich w as B erlin. It was cold and m iserable with
plenty o f snow as we trudged along the road clearing each little
ham let or tow n o f any enem y resistance. For the m ost part, the
enem y had departed and w as trying to re-group to protect their
rear flank as they retreated from the assault o f the A m erican and
British troops.
O ur platoon had slow ly cleared this one particular group o f
buildings possibly a fam ily farm at one tim e, and w as m oving on
to clear a building 50 to 60 yards up the road when we encount­
ered enem y rifle fire. The final building turned out to be their
last defense and they had som e o f their riflem en, with snow
uniform s, laying out in the fields behind cows that had been shot
but w ere still breathing, so you co uldn’t pick up the breathing o f
the G erm an riflem en. This m ade it alm ost im possible to realize
they were there. O nce we left the protection o f the buildings o f
this little ham let and advanced to the open roadw ay heading
tow ard this rem aining b u ild in g -th e enem y opened fired on the
targets we provided.
O ur advance scout, H ubie Ford, from Chicago, w as shot in the
head and laid out there on the road crying for help w hile the rest
o f the platoon w ent for cover. It w as only then that we realized
where the rifle fire w as com ing from and we w ere unable to go
to the aid o f our lead scout. We did return heavy fire at the
enem y and they finally retreated to the protection o f their
stronghold. In the m eantim e we finally reached Hubie but it was
too late. 1 m ight ju st m ention at this point that Hubie and I w ere
quite close—why because w hile in training back in G eorgia we
both enjoyed the big band sound and it’s v o c a lists-so when the
"Hit Parade" cam e on with Frank S in a tra -w e w ere the only tw o
who would stay in the barracks to listen, in spite o f the squealing
o f the teenagers. T he rest o f the platoon would vacate the
barracks.
At this point, w ith resistance still forthcom ing from the
building up the road, w e w ithdrew to the ham let that we had ju st
cleared and settled in for the night. W e w ere assigned to
different stations and told to keep on the alert for any further
attack by the enem y. A big barn presented shelter for m any o f
us, som e in the hayloft, others on the m ain floor and I ended up
alone in the harness room on the second floor with a view o f one
flank that I was to pay heed to for further enem y action.
N ight cam e on and m any o f us fell a sle e p -a n d then it
happened. W hat looked like a giant ta n k -w h ic h it was a T iger
Tank top o f the line in the w ay o f G erm an arm or. It quietly
rolled its way over a hill to our front and opened fire on the
bam . Talk about alarm w aking one from his beauty sleep. It
blew about h alf o f the bam aw ay and sent m ost o f us scam pering
for a way out. All this brought most o f us to the center court­
yard o f this little ham let and our first reaction was to take o ff as
fast as we could run aw ay from the shelter we have been in. It
ju st so happened that the tw o officers w ith us had already
THE BULGE BUGLE
A King Tiger is used as a signal pole by men of the 82"'*
A irborne Division./t/5'^r/Mj
SAVE US THE EXPENSE
OF SENDING A REMINDER...
The certificates and q u arterm aster item s we sell have helped us
keep our dues at $15.00 for m any years.
Y our help in
subm itting your dues on tim e can also help. So check your
m ailing label to see if your dues are due (or past due) and sub­
m it them w ithout a rem inder. R em inders are costly. Save us the
expense. T h a n k y o u .o
24
February 2006
luggage up a nice long hill to the trucks. (Oh m y aching back.
Still lovely weather. Lots o f clouds and heavy dew . Rode in
trucks to M etz. Settled in one house for the night, then m ove to
another the next day. Set up our Aid Station. D uring our stay
in M etz, the regim ent m ade attem pts to take forts outside the
city. Two o f them surrendered. The house used for the Aid
Station sure was a setup. Hot and Cold w ater, and we w ere able
to take a bath—plenty o f room too.
D ecem ber 13. Left M etz early in the m orning. (CER—General
WORLD WAR II DIARY
C aptain Dean F. Stillson
87th Infantry Division
345th Infantry Regiment
Battalion Surgeon
[The following article appeared in The Golden Acorn, the
newsletter o f the 87th Infantn’ Division. March/April,
2005.]
Runstedt launched the German Ardennes offensive this day.)
Took a truck ride tow ard the Saar. (CER-this probably means
Saareguemins or Saarhrucher nn the Saar River, due east o f
Metz). Pitched tents in an open field. An observation plane
INTRODUCTORY NOTE: My name is J e ff Stillson and
Dean Stillson was my father. After the war my father
settled in Youngstown, Ohio and raised our family. He
died in 1974. but we didn 7 fin d his handwritten diary from
the war until about ten years ago. D ad’s best friend.
Charles E. Rath, who was also an Army surgeon in the
war. typed up my father’s experiences in the war. He, like
many, never talked with his family about what happened to
him there.
crashed close to where we set up. Stayed that night.
D ecem ber 14. M oved on our way into battle. Arrived at
Suicide Hill late at night. Set up our CP (com m and post) Tent,
and ten o f us bedded down in it. It was a pitch black, as black
as the depth o f hell. Along about this tim e we got uui first
introduction to enem y artillery. A shell cam e close enough to
scatter m ud on our tent, and produced our first casualty For
once the M edics becam e the most popular m em bers o f the unit.
For a few m inutes that fam iliar cry heard throughout the war
was first heard. Medic! Funny how excited people get when
death stalks at their doorstep. The rest o f the night passed
w ithout a m ishap.
D ecem ber 15. Stood around most o f the m orning until about
noon when a few shells dropped in—this time right in the middle
[We have excerpted the portion o f this account which deals v.'ith
the Battle o f the Bulge and information which will make the
story’ complete.]
Excerpts: Preface: The W orld W ar com bat jou rn al o f Capt.
Dean Earl Stillson, M C, A US, that follow s w as found recently
in a storage trunk that had been in the basem ent. Its existence
had been previously unknow n. Uean w as my best friend at the
C ollege o f W ooster we room ed together for the first tw o years
ai 'w csiciii RcSci VC UiliVcrSitV “vlcdiCa! School (N o W —CaSC
W estern R eserve), \vc both got m arried in the sum m er o f 194!
and we shared a w eek o f our honeym oons in Canada. W c lived
in adjacent apartm ents for tw o years after m arriage and were
called to m ilitary service before our internships w ere com pleted,
and began our com bat careers in G enn an y , not far apart, in
D ecem ber, 1944, as battalion surgeons.
In editing the m anuscript, I have used italics to cm pliasize
D ean’s statem ents that 1 thought have had special m eaning for
him . W ithin parentheses italics are used for com m ents by m.e,
(CEPv) regarding place nam es and observations that seem ed to
me to be w orthy o f com m ent. C harles E. Rath, M.D. (CER).
W O R I I') W A R 11 l O I I R N A l
o f a group o f men that were ha\’ing an after dinner chin-fest.
The resuli was ihai a number o f men met their mci'ner and several
others came close to it. War suddenly became a reality and not
iii'ir somerhing in a newsreel. It wasn I fun anymore. Dui ing the
afternoon we m oved back over the hill to a m ore reasonable safe
distance. D uring the evening chow a few more rounds cam e in
This tim e we didn’t stand around with our m ouths hanging open
but got ourselves as close to M other Earth as possible—and to
hand with the chow!
A fter dark we w andered around the convoy until we cam e to
a nice big field w here we put iifi fu r tlie nlglit Tiiis tim e we tiug
in. The shells w histled over every so often.
D ecem ber 16. Then cam e the dawn and we pulled out on our
way to a nearby tow'n, R im ling (CER. I can't find this town on
the map). Here we stopped at another .Aid Station to get kind o f
oriented. They offered us coffee and we ate k-rations for
breakfast. We found ourselves in a house in the tow n where we
set up the aid station. It w asn ’t much. Just two room s. In the
afternoon casualties began to be brought in. A dm inistered our
first plasina. Saw our first patient die In fa c t-h a d our first
experience as com bat m edic. Late the sam e day—moved to the
next village. G uderkirk. (CER—can 't find this town either/.
Took over a couple o f room s from a fam ily and set up again.
Had our first Jerry casualty. We slept in the kitchen.
D ecem ber 17. M oved on to the hillside w'here we set up Our
Station (CP Tent) along side a ravine. Dug in. Tried cooking
10 in 1 ration on a squad burner. The nights were darker than
the lowest depth o f purgatory It was all o n e’s life was worth to
try to go an\' place.
D eceinber 19. M oved to relieve another battalion. Arrived in
our spot right in the iniddle o f a beech forest. O ur first "pissing
o f f cam e when the MAC (('ER—l'm not sure who is meant hv
OF CAPTAIN DFAN F
ST IL LSO N , MC, AUS, 1944-1945
N ovem ber 24. Left B iddulph, England
N ovem ber 26. A rrived at Southham pton
N ovem ber 28. A rrived Le H avre, France at 1400, w ith duffel
bag, and full field equipm ent, am idst all the rubble o f a bom bed
out harbor. We w aited several hours for trucks to take us to the
next place.
N ovem ber 29. B ivouacked in an open field outside Le Havre
under shelter halves and trees am id rain and mud. (N ear Roue.
France).
D ecem ber 5. T ook o ff from the orchard on a nice train ride in
cattle cars (40'8). W onderful w eather! Rain by the buckets. In
our boxcar w ere C aptain K ram er and Jerry' Stockw ell. both o f
whom becam e K IA s shortly afterw ards.
D ecem ber 8. A rrived in M etz. D etrained at Briey. C arried our
"the MAC". Each medical unit had a medical corps officer
(C ontinued)
TUF B U L G t I3UGLL
25
Fcbruar,' 2006
Dean E. Stillson Diary
Set up in a bakery. R eplaced another Aid Station w hich had
paved the w ay for us, consequently the people w ere very
friendly. Had som e o f our first B elgian rye bread. D elicious.
Here O wens had a little run in w ith our "beloved" M A C, all over
cleaning up the latrine--guess w ho w on the m oral victory.
January 7. L eft O cham ps. W hen we left, the p roprietor o f the
place w here w e stayed gave us a huge apple pie for a couple o f
cakes o f soap. L ater w e stopped at ano th er village long enough
to eat and set up. Then late at night w e pulled out.
January 8.
Jenneville (CER—This is probably Fenneville,
Belgium, about 7 miles north o f Moircy. O ur Aid Station was
set up at Jenneville. W e stayed here several days. Many
casualties. Harrington had half his face blown off. Stockwell
was apparently killed. Barbato was hit. The bam im m ediately
behind the A id Station caught fire and w e "tore ass" to get aw ay
lest we m ake a good target for the artillery. The people in the
house w ere very friendly and w ould rather we w ere there than
the Boche.
January 11. M oved back to M oircy. M oved into a house that
had a few holes blow n in it from the counterattack o f the 30th.
R ather quiet now. Saw our first m ovies, held in a hayloft. W ent
to Bertix (CER—I found this one.
It's a small village in
Belgium, very close to Bastogne) for show ers. Plenty o f snow
now. N othing in the w ay o f casualties. W ashed som e o f our
ODs out for the first tim e.
January 14. Spirm ont. (not on the map) Left M oircy, went
through T enneville headed for Spirm ont. Ran into a bit o f
difficulty before we arrived. Just on the edge o f tow n a bridge
was blow n out. Here w as the one and only tim e that we had to
pack our equipm ent on our backs to get across the river w here
Kid O w ens the Port A m boy kid m et D enise. (CER—Probably an
(C ontinuation)
MAC) but he did not outrank the MC or medical corps officer.)
ordered the CP tent to be dug in before we got our own little slit
trench m ade.
Finally, after a considerable am ount o f bitching, both were
done. The tent w as piled high for protection and our own little
hole started. As the day passed the hole got deeper and piled
high w ith logs for protection, It was at this point that the Jerry’s
developed a bad habit o f throw ing in m ortars and 88 shells to
keep us uncom fortable. Jerry patrols w ere reported to have
w andered w oods at night. At the end o f our stay, word cam e
from CP to send all litter bearers to the front at once. W e did.
As usual som ebody got all hot and bothered before the tim e, and
there w asn ’t nearly the business we had envisioned. M A C ’s
have a w ay o f doing such things.
D ecem ber 23. L eft the hillside. T ook o ff on a long cold ride.
The convoy got m ixed up a few tim es as usual. (CER-On this
date according to the official record the 87th Division received
orders to break contact with the enemy in the Saar Region and
got going immediately fo r Belgium to help contain the Bulge.
The division including the 354th Regiment, then moved350 miles
in three days.)
D ecem ber 24. A rrived in a sm all tow n w here we set up in a
house beside the village church. The to w n ’s nam e w as C utting,
France. (CER—Can ’t fin d this town either).
D ecem ber 25. Sam e place. Had a regular C hristm as dinner.
C hurch held services all day. It w as a beautiful day. Had a
short breather before pushing o ff again. B ivouacked 6 km. from
R eim s, France, for three days. (CER—Reams is halfway between
Paris and Metz, and a long way east o f the Saar region).
D ecem b er29. B right and early, we began an approach m arch to
M oircy, Belgium . (CER—About ten miles west o f Bastogne). At
Freuxz (CER—About 2 1/2 south o f Moircy), we were pinned
down by snipers fo r some time. Set up our Aid Station in town
once it was cleared. The place w as a tavern. (CER—1 used a
inside Joke)
O ur Aid Station in this tow n w as a house w here only the night
before, the Jerries had stayed. Seem s as though one o f them got
in front o f the w indow and som eone took a pot shot at him and
put a bullet right through his belly. Poor fellow died. The lady
o f the house told us all about it.
Had a few days here. We were no m ore set up than the
civilians began com ing in for treatm ents o f one sort or another.
(CER--1 had a sim ilar experience in G erm any. The doctors were
all N azis so they left and we took care o f m any o f the civilians.)
Some had unfortunately gotten in the w ay o f shrapnel and
bullets. We evacuated som e o f our first civilians. Saw som e
m ovies here, an A bbot and C ostello feature, up in the hayloft it
w asn ’t anyw ay w arm . In back o f the house w here we w ere on
a hillside, w ere the rem ains o f an aviator w ho had been shot
down by the G erm ans. Portions o f his plane w ere strew n along
the roadside. The population co u ld n ’t understand w hy he w asn ’t
rem oved im m ediately upon arrival.
The people w ith whom we stayed w ere very pleasant. We ate
w ith them in the kitchen using our ow n food. W hite bread was
a rare treat for them . The tw o daughters, D enise and Lucille,
w ere very nice. At this point in the w ar, the G erm ans w ere very
m uch on the run. Back a w ays, T/3 O w ens had a bit o f trouble
w ith M AC, and now the results o f the fracas cam e up. Our
technician w as relegated to the position o f aid m an in one o f the
com panies, along w ith our truck d river w ho w as deposed by
another o f our m en, w ho had considerable m ore ability to
"brown nose." It all ended well.
On the w hole we had a good tim e here. The people w ere nice
in spite o f the fact
(C ontinued)
tavern whenever possible because o f the wide entrance doorway
making it easier to carry a litter and also the bar could be used
as an examining and treatment table. There was usually a sink
and running water as well.) The proprietress w as quite helpful
and didn’t object too strenuously to our using her place. Here
we m et a young m arquis w ho cam e in and talked to us in broken
English.
This was the beginning o f our part in fighting back G eneral
von R unstedt’s co u n terattack . (The Bulge). The troops ran into
difficulties. Late in the afternoon the casualties began to com e
in.
D ecem ber 30. O ur first big day as com bat m edics. M any casu­
alties o f all kinds. The troops ran into trouble. T iger tanks, 88s
and all the rest. No support on our side. Jim B ockley was badly
shot up—FC both legs (Comminutedfractures). Captain Kramer
killed (CER—according to the 87th Division second captain
Kramer leading the 1st Battalion, to which I believe Captain
Stillson belonged, stopped the German Panzers at Moircy).
D ecem ber 31. Rough going. Left Freux for another town.
A rrived, set up, stayed at night.
January 2. 1945. W e w ere rem oved from our quarters by Corps
A rtillery. We pulled out and m oved up the road and set up in
a fine old chateau. Spent a couple o f quiet days here. Snow has
begun to com e dow n in quantity.
January 4. Left the chateau for O cham ps. (CER—not on map)
THt^ BULGE BUGLE
26
Fcbruan- 2006
Dean E. Stillson D iary
excitable portion o f the outfit got all upset over nothing and
everyone w as led in a word o f prayer, and then took o ff for
m ore details at the CP. O f course, as it turned out it was a
routine alert, and very little to get ju m p y about, but people have
a w ay o f ju m p in g to conclusions. One o f the officers tried to
find his w ay into his bedroll with a great deal o f difficulty and
slept o ff his inebriation w ith the exception o f a few m om ents
when m other nature called.
(C ontinuation)
that some o f their relatives were killed by our artillery'. We had
no battle casualties to care for and few o f the ordinary little
things. F acchiano and B ack (?) got into a bit o f a fight over a
silly little cause, as usual. D id you ever see tw o guys fight
w earing all the clothing that the arm y issues them for w inter
w ear? N ot too m uch chance o f getting hurt but once dow n, a
derrick w ould help to get one up.
January 18. Left Spirm ont. T ook a long truck ride south
through A rion (CER—In Belgium on the Litxembourg border,
about 16 mites west o f Luxembourg City) to L uxem bourg, and
then to Beck (CER—about 6 miles SIf’ o f Echternach which is
Got a lot o f replacements, but unfortunately some o f them had
the mumps which complicated matters a hit.
January 26. Left our nice com fortable spot in Scheidgen on a
long ride that ended in L im erle', Belgium (Close to the
Luxembourg border about 15 miles NE o f Bastogne). Found
ourselves a spot for the Aid Station. By now, the B attle o f the
Bulge w as under control. L im erle’ was a sort o f crossroads, and
every conceivable outfit seem ed to be cruising through
Houffalize, Belgium , (about ten miles north o f Bastogne) and
B astogne w here recently there had been som e really tough
battles. H ouffalize w as pretty well beat up. O utside o f town
were m any tanks w hich had been beat all to hell in the fight.
Two good looking daughters lived in the house w here we set up.
We sat in the kitchen w ith the fam ily and visited as best we
could in broken French.
about 24 miles NE o f Luxembourg City, on the Sauer River at
the German border.) The tow n w as com pletely evacuated. The
houses had been com pletely and thoroughly looted but not
bom bed. Ate ourselves som e K -rations. Found we w ere in the
w rong place, took o ff north a piece, and set up in a m ore or less
isolated farm house.
The kitchen m oved w ith as w ell as the com m unications section.
In the back o f the house a piece w as a battery o f "Long fom s"
that had the bad feature o f belching forth shells every so often
practically shaking all the p laster down and rattling w hat
rem ained o f the w indow s. Had some nice deep snow that made
(CER—On January 27th the 87th Division received orders from
General Patton to "Drive the enemy out o f Belgium and crack
through the Siegfried Line. "
January 28. Left L im erle’ and stopped at Ourthe. (CER-Can’t
fin d the village o f Ourthe but there is an Ourthe River in the
vicinity.) Cooked up a m eal for ourselves on squad burners—
getting the patients and casualties a rather difficult proposition,
hi fact there was one man killed and another injured and it took
all o f seven or eight men to get the poor fellow back to the Aid
Station. Som e thirteen road blocks had to be gotten around in
order not to set o ff the booby trips or m ines that m ight be
hidden there. T his w as the longest and probably the toughest
litter haul that any o f our m en had to m ake during our com bat
experience.
January 21. M oved from our spot outside Becli and into the
tow n o f Scheidgen. (CER—Can ’t fin d Scheidgen).
Had a
G asthaus for an Aid Station. It m ade a right nice p lace—big
room for the station proper, a couple other room s for sleeping,
a good basem ent for protection against shells ju s t in case. As it
happened w e d id n ’t have any use for it. The town w as in the
zone that w as com pletely ev acuated by civ ih an s so we d id n ’t
have them to contend with. T here w as a dead bull in the barn
over the garage but then dead anim als began to becom e a
com m on sight from now on for a spell. The com panies were
spread out in defensive positions around Echternach and along
the Sauer River.
H ere we had our fam ous Prayer M eeting. It began w hen the
captain developed nasopharyngitis and was taken back for a brief
rest. In his absence, we w ere "honored" w ith a substitute
supplied by R egim ent, an ex citable sort o f person as bad as our
MAC. A long about this tim e the officers w ere given their liquor
ration and this m eant a bit o f partying. To com plicate m atters,
there w as a w ild rum or o f m aking a river crossing (Sauer River)
at E chternach, and attack in g the enem y positions on the other
side o f the river. For som e reason the officers got the notion
that it w ould be their jo b to construct som e m eans o f doing this.
All sorts o f w eird plans w ere m ade for constructing a raft or
bridge, etc., to haul patients to shore. Som e fun.
The point o f this cam e the day w e pulled out o f the place in a
long convoy. O ne night w hen the corks on the bottles popped
a little too freely certain hunks o f brass (officers) got a bit on the
polluted side. At the height o f all this a m essage cam e from
';nm pnlace that we w ere alerter! Hnlv Mtriesi This wa<; it' The
T IIF m il.C iH IM K il.h
coffee, sausage, etc.
U illlU U g ,il
IIWVV
v » V « l s..
V isited with the fam ily in the kitchen
___/ I C U /
.... .
^ ULit
t c / V _ I C / u t i l i t y iA/llA
it
leery o f the people. No telling when they might gel violent
January 29. St. Vith, B elgium (A bout 28 m iles N E o f Bastogne
and about 3 m iles from the G erm an border). A rrived in town
w here our 1st Sergeant had picked us out a couple o f room s for
our Aid Station in a big apartm ent house. The only thing we
had to do was clean out all the furniture, block up the vvindows
to keep out the cold and generally get set. W e did this and goi
m ost o f our equipm ent in w hen our brave C harlie (MAS)
discovered a nice big 100 lb dud lying under the snow on the
door step. !t w asn 't long until we m oved aiiain to another place
in a nice small cozy dark cellar.
On our w ay to St. Vith, we had to take a most devious route
in order tn avoid mirtP'i In going thrnugh the <;nnw drifts the
truck (CER—Probably a 3/4 ton U.S. Army truck) broke down.
It had to be unloaded and the stuff hauled in by jeep. On our
next m ove, we had to leave m uch o f our stu ff behind until the
truck w as repaired.
January' 30. Pulled out o f St. Vith and m oved to a sm all mill in
a bit o f a village called Huen (can't fin d it). This w as probably
the w orst o f all our inside stations—barny, dirty and all in all,
unattractive. Had originally picked a better place, but the CP
decided they needed it. (CER—My experience was similar—the
commanding officer always got first choice o f accommodations).
Brass m ust be properly taken care o f
It w as during our stay here that the third battalion had a lot of
casualties. W e took care o f them . It seems a shell landed in a
chow line—bad for the troops. The people in the place where we
were staying m ust have been hard hit by the w ar because they
were sax’ing K-ration boxes and scraping the uyu' off them for
candles.
(C ontinued)
27
I'ehriiar) 2006
D ean E. S tillson D iary
(C ontinuation)
O ne o f tiie com panies took o ff in the attacl; and ended up tai<ing
the w rong town. R ather em barrassing! (CER- Events like this
were so common that I often said—"how come we are winning
this war?")
Also about this tim e during a rather difficult time, m ost o f the
officers and the non-com s in the com pany found excuses to com e
back to the Aid Station. Sure had a m ess on our hands for a
spell. It was here that Pvt. Sullivan, one o f our litter bearers
turned up m issing. Sullivan was a funny sort o f kid—very
seldom said anything. In Le Havre he picked up a mine and
tossed it against a w all to see if it w ould go o f f Turned up in
the Station one day w ith a hom e m ade T om m y Gun concocted
out o f another. Sullivan turned up som e m onths later as a POW -m ore luck than b rain s.a
German Surrender
has become a more common sight than before
D o n ’t look now hut there's old ‘coushay a w vec'
hack in town. ”
Truck Ride gives these soldiers a chance
f o r a much needed nap before
going on a new attack.
I OfTtN \NONOtfi n o w WE MAOC OJT
ON THAT AOMV
TEST '
THE BULGE BUGLE
28
February 2006
routing the G erm ans took m im icked the sam e one taken in the
Franco/Prussian W ar o f 1870. and W orld W ar I. (M y father
suffered dearly in a m ustard gas attack by the G erm ans in 1917).
Thirty-tw o M edals o f H onor w ere aw arded during the
A rdennes-A lsace Cam paign. First to receive was Tech Sergeant
Vernon M. G arity, o f the 393rd Infantry, 99th i:)ivision, who
after being treated for w ounds during the K rinkelt battle,
returned to the fray to lead his squad, rescuing w ounded under
fire and single liaiideuly uestioyiiig an advancing enem y m achine
gun section. Out num bered and facing superior w eapons, m any
U.S. soldiers fought to the bitter end; survivors surrendering only
when their m unitions had run out and escape was im possible.
A fter tw o days o f fighting his men were captured after firing
their last bullets.
My own division, the 87th G olden A corn, received one Medal
o f H onor Sgt. Curtis Shoupe. A ltogether in our com bat from
2/13/44 - 5 /8 1 9 4 5 , we re c e iv e d 420 Silver Stars; 1,519 Bronze
Stars; 31 Air iviedals; and 4 ,6 7 i Purple H eart for wounds
received in a c tio n -c o m b a t related. My own com bat experience
after fighting in France, B elgium , Luxem bourg, and tw ice in
G erm any ended after the battle o f the Bulge w hen I was
wounded (2/8/45 in the G erm an Sigfried Line). A fter seven
m onths (four m onthly paralyzed) in four different hospitals:
BarLeD ir, France; 91st G eneral. O xford. England; Harriman
G eneral, N ew York C ity; Newton D. Baker Hospital,
M artinsburg, W est V irginia. 1 was discharged from the Army
with a perm anent disability on Septem ber 4th. 1945.
The A rlington C em etery—this garden o f stone which carries the
flower o f ou[ youths, contains over 250,000 souls who have
given their lives in com bat and service to your beloved country.
In sum m ary then, facing death in the cruel fierce world o f
com bat, everything abnorm al and unstable, it gives one a
different perspective on what is im portant in life. I have been
told that o f the original 200 men on our ritle com pany only 29
cam e hom e—m any w ounded. Before m any more years pass, all
that will rem ain o f history’s m ost terrible w ar will be the books
and cem eteries, m useum s, and m onum ents.
No one will
rem.ember those w h o fe ll, wiiere they i:Hnie fro m , w h y they
fought, how it felt to w atch them die. There will be no reunions
o f old soldiers retelling im probable tales. There will be no
nam es o f buddies carried like lockets close to the heart. One
lesson learned from all o f this is that we cannot discover
ourselves by ourselves.
M erry C hristm as and a Happy New Y ear to all. May we all
m eet again next year. Be safe in your travels as you head for
home.B
t\
REFLECTIONS
By Joseph Zim m er
87th Infantrj- Division
345th Infantr> Regiment
Company B
Good evening on this 18th C om m em orative Banquet for the 61 st
A nniversary o f the Battle o f the Bulge.
D ifficult is the softest w ord w hich I have chosen to sum up our
present feelings. In the course o f speculating about the reasons
for our w orld being in such a disorderly state, at the m om ent, we
can turn our conversation to the present scarcity o f what used to
be know n as heroes. Som e say it is due to the absence o f ideals
and civilitv. H eroes, after all, are the m en and w om en who
carried out. in a heroic w ay w hat you and I w ere brought to be,
or, raised to regard as noble ideals—like patriotism , sacrifice, and
courage.
G eneral D ouglas M acA rthur’s farew ell address to the Army
C orps at W est Point upon his return as UN C om m ander, during
the K orean W ar in the early 1950’s, sum m arizes these ideals, in
a m ilitary w ay, by the them e o f his words:
Duty, Honor
C ountry, in a very drastic m anner. The men and w om en in our
m ilitary now engaged in Iraq, A fghanistan, and other areas
fighting terrorism , and, those A m ericans stationed and serving
our beloved country in over 120 countries around the w orld, as
we m eet, e.xemplify the highest standards o f bravery and
dedication ju s t m entioned. W e owe them our prayers and
support, fviay tiicy leiu u i to tlieii fciiiiilicb iii iiiuic p c d tc f u l
endeavors and duties, as quickly as teasiblc.
Each o f the veterans o f the largest land battle ever fought by
our U.S. A rm y, can fully understand and appreciate to n ig h t’s
com m em oration.
It is to honor, rem em ber and recall, the
m em ory and tragedy o f the 19,000 w ho gave their last full
m easure o f devotion—their lives, those 62.000 w ounded and
those w ho survived unscathed. O ur presence here is to make
certain that w hat we did, w ent through and suffered from will
never be forgotten.
It v.'as C hristm as eve and we w ere able to attend m idnight mass
as there w as a cease fire to collect our dead. I cannot fully
describe the feeling I had carrying my M-1 into the church near
.'Msace Loran, it w ill never be forgotten.
Each o f us can gaze in a m irror reflect briefly, and see the
im age o f one w ho m ade the difference in that terrible tim e and
that terrible battle.
It w as a cold and desolate place, the
A rdennes Forest, and the surrounding environs to be fighting a
m ajor battle to stop the m assive G erm an drive tow ard A ntw erp
and the M euse River. T ow ns and villages like T illet, M oircy, St.
Vith, St. H ubert, H ouffalize, A rlon, E chternach, etc. Echternach
com es to m ind w hile cleaning the G erm ans out o f the tow n, 1
cam e across a w o m an ’s petticoat hanging in a closet. It later
served as great cam ouflage for m e in the snow s that follow ed,
m aybe I’m here today because o f her largesse.
Like past history repeating itself our intelligence guessed
w rongly based on the inform ation received and contributed to
underestim ating the extent o f the force the enem y had m assed for
the operation W ACH'F AM RHINE (W'atch on the Rhine), w hich
started the m ornina o f D ecem ber 16, 1944. at 5:30 a.m. The
iHH BUl.CiF. BUGLF
29
I'cbruar) 2006
VETERANS OF THE BATTLE OF THE BULGE CERTmCATE
The Veterans o f the Battle o f the
Bulge Assn is proud to offer a full color 11"
by 17" certificate, which may be ordered by
any veteran who received credit for the
Ardennes Campaign. It attests that you
participated in, endured and survived the
greatest land battle ever fought by the US
Army You do not have to be a member o f
the VBOB Assn in order to order one but
VETERANS OF THE BATTLE OF THE BULGE
you must have received the Ardennes credit.
•WtH.ir ^r, /y »f/ tunt. that
This beautiful certificate is produced on
parchment-like stock and is outlined by the
full color WWII insignias o f the major units
that fought in the Battle o f the Bulge
S/>, 4Utl/< (/7/f/y t/n■/ t m y
starting with the 12th Army Group followed
/^; 'Jrcrm^t
Jft'/.i
numerically with Armies, Corps and
Divisions and the two Army Air Forces. We
wished that each unit insignia could have
been shown but with approximately 2000
units that participated in the Bulge it was impossible. However any unit which served in the Bulge would have been attached to or
reported through one o f the unit insignia depicted. You may want to add one o f your original patches to the certificate, when you
receive it. Units were researched in the Official General Order No. 114 for Units Entitled to the ARDENNES Battle Credit and will be
the basis for sale o f this certificate. The unit insignias shown are also those used in the design o f the Battle o f the Bulge Memorial
Conference Table dedicated and on view in the Garrison Library at Ft Meade, MD (open Mon & Wed 12;30-3:00 PM. The requests
to date have been overwhelming, therefore we would request that you allow approximately 3-4 weeks for delivery.
A Special Certificate is available to spouses or children o f those who made the Supreme Sacrifice in the Battle o f the Bulge or
who died o f wounds received in the Battle o f the Bulge The individual request should have the date and place o f death and be certified
by the family requestor or by a buddy who was present. Multiple copies o f the same certificate may be ordered if you have a number
o f children/grandchildren Rank or command during the Bulge is preferred. It will be abbreviated to the WWII or three character
standard. The certificate will be shipped rolled in a protective mailing tube. Please be sure to place your name, service number and
unit as you would like it to appear on the certiflcate. The unit name should as fiill as possible as you want someone reading it to
understand what unit you were in. We will abbreviate it as necessary. It is important that you type or print this information. The unit
must be one o f the 2000 units authorized for the Ardennes Campaign credit The cost of the certificate is S15.00 postpaid.
■ 9 0 A #
m
p
HI
O T i S ®
Unfortunately we do not have any more frames available at this time. John Bowen is presently trying to arrange
with other suppliers who will produce these special sizes in quantities of 100. This may result in a higher frame cost. Our
previous order had to be for 500 frames which took over three years to sell and resulted in the non use of a garage where they
were stored. We will keep you posted.
VETERANS OF THE BATTLE OF THE BULGE CERTHi^ICATE ORDER BLANK
I request an 11" x 17" Certificate and certify that I received credit for the Ardennes Campaign during my military service. I have
enclosed a check for $15.00 for the Certificate. Please include the following information that I would like on the certificate;
First Name
Last Name
MI
Serial Number
Rank (Optional)
Organization:Company, Battalion and/or Regt, Division
□ Killed in Action________________ Location___________
date
□POW
□Died o f Wounds
place
date
dates
Camp
MAILING INFORMATION:
Name
Apt No.
Street Address
City
State
VBOB Member;
Telephone Number (In case we need to call you)
Yes
No
not a requirement
Zip + 4 Code
Signature & date
M ake checks out to V B O B for S1S.0O. O rders should be m ailed to V B O B C ertificate, P O Box 11129, ArUngton, V A 22210-2129. Questions can be directed
to John D. Bowen, 301-384-6533, C ertifk a tc Chairm an.
THE BULGE BUGLE
30
February 2006
VBOB QUARTERMASTER
ORDER FORM
FHBRUARY, 2U06
P lease ship the following items to:
Name;
(first)
(last)
(phone #-wlll call only if there is a problem)
A ddress:
(no.)
(street)
(city)
Item Description
Price Each
VBOB Logo Patch - 3"
$ 4.50
VBOB Logo Patch - 4"
$ 5.50
VBOB Logo D ecal - 4"
$ 1 25
V B O B Windshield Logo - 4"
$ 1.25
VBOB Logo Stickers - IVe" (in quantities of 10)
10 for $1.25
Baseball C ap w /3’’ VBOB Logo P atch - Navy only
$ 10.00
W indbreaker w/4" VBOB Logo P atch - Navy only
P /e a s e circle siz e (they run a little snug): S
M
(XXL a n d XXXL - s e e prices)
L
XL
XXL
XXXL
VBOB Logo Lapel Pin - V2 "
$ 25.00 (S, M, L and XL)
$ 26.00 for XXL
$ 27.00 for XXXL
$ 5.00
Miniaiure VBOB Lcgc Medai w/Ribbon (pin or. type)
VBOB Logo Be!t Buckie Silver tone or Go/d tone
(Piease circie choice)
VBOB Logo Boio Tie Silver tone or Gold tone
(Please circle choice)
$ 16.00
$ 16.00
VBOB License Plate Fram e w/Logos - While plastic w/Black printing
$ 5.00
V B O B 100 S h eet Notepad w/Logo - "This Note Is From...
BaWe of the Bwge - VVh'te p aper w ith 0iuR printing
$ 3.00
BACK IN STOCK
I
II^C
Ho q I
$1
Dl
\ / D / ^ D
f n r
in
i
Logo N eck m8cjal!ion w/ribbon
A Veteran of the
(state)
Quantity
(zip)
Total Price
VETERANS
of the
BATTLE
of the
BULGE
P.O. Box 101418
A rlington, V irsin ia 22210-4418
FEBRUARY, 2006
W E’RE NOT HORSING AROUND
WE WANT TO SEE YOU IN
LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY
September, 2006
Details in the next issue.

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